Co-Op miners in Utah press union-organizing fight
Transcription
Co-Op miners in Utah press union-organizing fight
AUSTRALIA $1.50 · CANADA $1.50 · FRANCE 1.00 EURO · ICELAND KR100 · NEW ZEALAND $2.00 · SWEDEN KR10 · UK £.50 · U.S. $1.00 INSIDE World War II: Three wars in one — PAGE 6 A S O CI AL I S T NE WS WE EK L Y P U B L ISH ED IN TH E IN TE R E S TS OF W OR K IN G P E OP LE VOL. 69/NO. 16 APRIL 25, 2005 Thousands in China, Korea protest effort to whitewash Workers picket loadout where bosses are training replacements Tokyo’s crimes Co-Op miners in Utah press union-organizing fight BY PAUL PEDERSON Thousands mobilized in cities across China April 9-10 to protest the issuing and use of textbooks by Tokyo that whitewash the history of Japanese imperialism’s colonial domination and brutality against China and Korea. The new history books are part of an ideological campaign by Tokyo to paint Nippon nationalism in a positive light as the rulers of Japan are rearming and preparing to use their military might again in the region—largely to face China—as a junior partner to their U.S. ally. Demonstrations protesting Japanese imperialism were also held in Seoul, south Korea. These included a rally led by the few surviving Korean sex slaves of the Japanese imperial troops during the 191045 Japanese occupation of Korea. The estimated 200,000 mainly Chinese and Korean women forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese troops are absent or get barely a mention in the new school texts, where they are referred to as “comfort women.” The Japanese government is using the campaign as part of pressing to extend the use of its military abroad today. There are 550 Japanese troops serving in Iraq—Japan’s largest military operation abroad since World War II. Tokyo is trying to use its offer of similar military collaboration as a bargaining chip to get a permanent seat on the UN Security Council, a move that is hotly contested by the governments of China and Korea. In China an online campaign claims to have collected more than 25 million signatures opposing Tokyo’s bid for a seat on the Security Council. Recently, the Japanese government signed defense accords with the U.S. government that explicitly called defense of the Taiwan Straits a “common strategic objective” of Tokyo and Washington. This is an explicit Continued on Page 10 BY LUIS ASTORGA AND ELIZABETH NIX PRICE, Utah—Coal miners who worked at the Co-Op mine and their supporters picketed at the road leading to Rail Co. Coal Load Out near Price, Utah, April 13. The miners have been fighting for 18 months to win representation by the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA). They were joined by UMWA retired miners. Rail Co. has the same owners as C.W. Mining’s Co-Op mine. It is the location where coal from Co-Op and other mines is trucked before being transported by train to other parts of the country. A loadout owned by another company is adjacent to Rail Co. Coal trucks come to these two facilities from mines throughout Utah. Miners and their supporters held signs in English and Spanish that read: “We want our jobs back,” “Yes to UMWA at the CoOp mine,” and “No contractors at Co-Op.” Drivers of coal trucks and other vehicles passing by honked their horns in support. This was the second time workers have picketed the facility since Co-Op miners learned that C.W. Mining has established a contracting outfit at Rail Co. through one Continued on Page 4 Militant/Luis Astorga Co-Op miners and supporters picket Rail Co. Coal Load Out, owned by C.W. Mining, April 13. The facility is being used to hire and train replacements for the unionists. Socialist Workers organize to get candidates on ballot BY ARGIRIS MALAPANIS “We are inviting co-workers, students planning to participate in the world youth festival in Caracas this summer, and all other supporters of the Socialist Workers campaign to join us in petitioning to get the working-class candidates on the ballot in New Jersey,” Ved Dookhun, the party’s campaign director in the state, told the NOW AVAILABLE! TWO NEW ISSUES OF ‘NEW INTERNATIONAL’ Special offer — $25 for both! From ‘New International’ no. 12 “One of capitalism’s infrequent long winters has begun. Accompanied by imperialism’s accelerating drive toward war, it’s going to be a long, hot winter.” —Jack Barnes Today’s sharpening interimperialist conflicts are fueled both by the opening stages of a world depression— what will be decades of economic, financial, and social convulsions and class battles—and by the most farreaching shift in Washington’s military policy and organization since the late 1930s, when the U.S. rulers prepared to join the expanding Asian and European wars, transforming them into World War II. Class-struggle-minded working people must face this historic turning point for imperialism, this cataclysmic crisis for “the West” and for “Christendom.” And draw satisfaction and enjoyment from being “in their face” as we chart a revolutionary course to confront it. New International no. 12 (In Spanish: Nueva Internacional no. 6)—$16 New International no. 13 (In Spanish: Nueva Internacional no. 7)—$14 For new readers: get each new ‘NI’ issue for $10 (or both for $20) with an introductory ‘Militant’ subscription Militant. “Petitioning in New Jersey begins May 7. We’ll have a big weekend May 7–8, ending with a campaign barbecue and fundraiser. By the next weekend we plan to collect 1,500 signatures—nearly double the requirement—to put Angela Lariscy, the SWP candidate for governor, and Michael Ortega, who is running for State Assembly in the 28th District, on the ballot.” Similar petitioning drives will follow in Pittsburgh, Seattle, and New York City. “We will start with a week-long effort on Memorial Day weekend,” said Tony Lancaster, a laid-off coal miner who is helping organize the campaign to gain ballot status for Brian Taylor, SWP candidate for mayor of Pittsburgh. Campaign supporters will then take a break to attend the June 9–11 party convention in Ohio. They will resume petitioning in mid-June and plan to collect about 2,000 signatures—double the requirement— to place Taylor, a coal miner and member of the United Mine Workers of America, on the ballot by the end of the month. Supporters of Taylor’s campaign and of other Socialist Workers candidates have already begun reaching out with the party’s platform. On April 9, campaigners from Pittsburgh and nearby cities visited mine portals and coal mining communities in northern Appalachia, Lancaster said, where they introduced working people to the Militant and the Marxist magazine New International. “We announced Taylor’s election campaign and found interest,” Lancaster said. Thirty miners bought the Militant at six mine portals and one subscribed to the socialist paper at the mine where Taylor works. Ron Smith, another Socialist Workers campaign supporter from Pittsburgh, said he explained to coal miners and other workers he met that the campaign is putting forward the need of workers to use union power to defend job safety, wages, and working conditions. In response, he added, one miner said: “That’s right. They Continued on Page 11 Rumsfeld: ‘No exit strategy’ from Iraq for U.S. troops BY SAM MANUEL WASHINGTON, D.C.— As part of responding to press reports that Washington would start cutting its troops in Iraq in 2006, U.S. defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld told U.S. soldiers during an April 12 visit to Baghdad that the Pentagon has no timetable for withdrawing its 150,000 troops from the country. “We don’t have an exit strategy, we have a victory strategy,” Rumsfeld said, according to the Bloomberg news service. “The goal is to help the Iraqi forces develop the skills and the capacity to provide their own security.” Three days earlier, the Washington Post reported that Iraqi troops now patrol part of Mosul, Iraq’s third-largest city and a center of attacks on U.S. and Iraqi government forces. This registers an advance by the U.S. military in training the Iraqi armed forces and police to take over responsibility for security. Meanwhile, the Iraqi National Assembly also took further steps in pulling together Continued on Page 10 Also Inside: U.S.-backed ‘independent library’ 2 campaign in Cuba flops Communist League candidates offer working-class alternative in British elections 3 Regional forums build support for Militant Fighting Fund 4 New York bus drivers win solidarity on picket lines 11 U.S.-backed ‘independent library’ campaign in Cuba falls flat the regime.” The Cuban Cultural Center is a New York–based group of Cuban-American opponents of the revolution that includes liberal and right-wing figures. “This ‘independent libraries’ campaign is not advancing,” Eliades Acosta, director of Cuba’s José Martí National Library, said in a February 16 interview in his office. “In fact, it has suffered a series of defeats. The effort will continue because it’s driven by powerful forces. But it has failed to convince a single librarian out of the thousands in Cuba. It’s failed to divide librarians in Cuba from their North American counterparts. And it hasn’t won international recognition. “The main international library organizations have rejected this campaign. At the August 2004 congress of the International Federation of Library Associations, IFLA, held in Argentina, the largest-ever Cuban delegation was welcomed. We had 22 Cuban librarians there and, for the first time ever, a stand with Cuban books.” IFLA has maintained its stance of refusing to support the “independent libraries” in Cuba. Describing them as “representatives in Cuba of the political interests of the U.S. government,” it has condemned the U.S. economic embargo against Cuba and called for strengthening the relationship with Cuba’s genuine libraries and librarians. A similar policy was adopted at a joint meeting in 2003 of the American Library Association and the Canadian Library Association. The U.S. government launched the “independent libraries” campaign in 1999 with the establishment of an operation called the “Friends of Cuban Libraries.” This outfit describes itself as “an independent, nonpartisan, nonprofit organization.” In fact, it has none of these attributes. The main individuals publicly associated with the operation are Jorge Sanguinetty, then a commentator on Radio Martí, Washington’s propaganda station against revolutionary Cuba; and Robert Kent, a librarian at the New York Public Library with a long history of activity against the Cuban Revolution. Kent has received financial backing from Freedom House, a U.S. government-funded organization. A few months before the official launch of the Friends of Cuban Libraries, Kent was in Havana meeting with Aleida Godínez, who, he believed, was a Cuban dissident and “independent librarian.” In fact, Godínez was an agent of Cuban state security who had infiltrated the ranks of Cuban counterrevo- BY JONATHAN SILBERMAN HAVANA—“A Cuban revolution, in reading” declared the New York Times in a February 22 article by David Gonzalez. The article was not, however, about the justconcluded Havana International Book Fair, which drew 600,000 people in this city of 2 million—a substantially higher number than previous years. It wasn’t about the more than 1 million books people bought at the fair, or about the extension of the book fair to 34 other cities across the island. Nor was the Times reporting on the more than 150 projects under way in Cuba to expand access to education and culture, from bringing electricity to the most isolated rural schools to establishing university-level schools in every Cuban municipality. On such matters the capitalist media internationally has been virtually silent. The Times article was part of an attempt to breathe life into the flagging campaign in support of “independent libraries” in Cuba—an effort promoted and financed by the U.S. government. “Independent librarians” is the self-styled title adopted by several dozen individuals in this country who carry out activity against the Cuban Revolution under the banner of defending intellectual freedom. They are neither librarians nor independent but part of small political groups that oppose the revolutionary government. These outfits use provisions of “Track II” of the 1992 Cuban Democracy Act (also known as the Torricelli bill) to receive financial backing from Washington, often through the National Endowment for Democracy and the U.S. Agency for International Development. In his March 3 testimony before a U.S. congressional panel reviewing the situation in Cuba, Roger Noriega, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemispheric affairs, reported that Washington has to date provided $14.4 million to such groups and individuals. “At the beginning of this year, members of the Cuban Cultural Center, an arts group that usually sponsors exhibitions and concerts, adopted an independent library in Cuba,” Gonzalez wrote in the New York Times. “The library itself, like some 100 others that have been founded since 1998, offers Cubans an alternative to the official media or state-run libraries. They carry newspapers and magazines from around the world or books considered taboo by No to orgy of imperialist war propaganda Washington and its imperialist allies are exploiting the 60th anniversary of V-E Day and V-J Day for nationalist propaganda to rationalize their current wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, and others they are planning. The ‘Militant’ provides the facts on World War II and its outcome. Don’t miss a single issue! Polish fighters during 1944 uprising in Warsaw SUBSCRIBE TODAY! NEW READERS ❏.$5 for 12 issues RENEWAL ❏.$10 for 12 weeks NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE UNION/SCHOOL/ORGANIZATION ZIP PHONE ❏.$20 for 6 months ❏.$35 for 1 year CLIP AND MAIL TO THE MILITANT, 306 WEST 37TH ST., 10TH FL. NEW YORK, NY 10018. 12 weeks of the Militant outside the U.S.: Australia and the Pacific, A$8 • United Kingdom, £4 • Canada, Can$7 • Caribbean and Latin America, $10 • Continental Europe, £12 • France, 12 Euros • Iceland, Kr 500 • New Zealand, NZ$10 • Sweden, Kr60 (Send payment to addresses listed in business information box) 2 The Militant April 25, 2005 Militant photos by Jonathan Silberman Above, 2004 Havana book fair, where hundreds of thousands came to buy Cuban and world literature. Left, Eliades Acosta, director of Cuba’s José Martí National Library, at 2005 book fair. lutionaries. Testimony by Godínez about this episode is featured in the book The Dissidents, by Rosa Miriam Elizalde and Luis Báez, published by Editora Política. “Kent introduced himself to me as having been sent by Frank Calzón, well-known to us as a former CIA agent…and leader of the Center for a Free Cuba,” Godínez said in an interview with Eliades Acosta posted on the web site of the José Martí National Library. What Frank Calzón needed had nothing to do with “independent libraries,” she explained. “This Robert Kent asked me for information about Servimed [an organization that promotes health tourism in Cuba] and he also asked me for a drawing of the house of Carlos Lage Dávila, vice-president of the Council of Ministers, and if I’d watch over the guard change at Lage’s house. What possible interest could a ‘friend of the independent libraries’ have in knowing about movements at the residence of Carlos Lage?” Godínez asked. Kent introduced himself as Robert Emmet. He traveled on a fake passport. In the course of his dealings with Godínez, he handed over some $500 and technical equipment for the spying work he asked her to undertake. Book ban charge flops “The real campaign by the U.S. government is a campaign aimed at destabilizing Cuba,” Eliades Acosta told the Militant. “Its goal is a change of government in Cuba. It has different aspects: economic, political, military. This is the ‘libraries wing’ of that effort.” They hope, Acosta explained, that by focusing their propaganda on “intellectual freedom” they can draw away some people who would be inclined to sympathize with the Cuban Revolution. “I received a letter from an Argentine, a Mr. Rubí, saying that he was a friend of Cuba but that he was concerned that Mark Twain is banned here,” Acosta said. “Rubí had heard this as a result of wild assertions that have been circulated on the web suggesting that books by Mark Twain had been seized by the Cuban authorities and burnt. I can understand such concern. I personally would be outraged if there were a country in the 21st century that banned Mark Twain.” Liberal columnist Nat Hentoff of the New The Militant Vol. 69/No. 16 Closing news date: April 13, 2005 Editor: ARGIRIS MALAPANIS Business Manager: ARGIRIS MALAPANIS Washington Bureau Chief: SAM MANUEL Editorial Staff: Róger Calero, Arrin Hawkins, Michael Italie, Martín Koppel, Sam Manuel, Doug Nelson, and Paul Pederson. Published weekly except for one week in January, June, July, and August. The Militant (ISSN 0026-3885), 306 W. 37th Street, 10th floor, New York, NY 10018. Telephone: (212) 244-4899; Fax (212) 244-4947. E-mail: [email protected] The Militant website is: www.themilitant.com Correspondence concerning subscriptions or changes of address should be addressed to The Militant Business Office, 306 W. 37th Street, 10th floor, New York, NY 10018. Periodicals postage paid at New York, NY. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the Militant, 306 W. 37th Street, 10th floor, New York, NY 10018. Subscriptions: United States: for one-year subscription send $35 to above address. Latin America, Caribbean: for one-year subscription send $65, drawn on a U.S. bank, to above York Village Voice recently wrote several articles applauding a book donation by the public library in Vermillion, South Dakota, to an “independent library” in Havana that included titles by Mark Twain. Hentoff declared that Mark Twain would make “Fidel Castro quake in his combat boots.” The charge, however, “just happens not to be true,” Acosta said. Not only is Mark Twain not banned in Cuba, his works are very popular here. They are studied in Cuban schools. Films based on his works are considered classics here. A new edition of Tom Sawyer was presented at the Havana International Book Fair this year. “In fact, if there is a country where Mark Twain doesn’t fit into current governmental politics, it’s the United States. Mark Twain was the vice-president of the Anti-Imperialist League. He spoke out against the U.S. occupation of Cuba, the Philippines, and Puerto Rico at the end of the 19th century. The American Library Association published a list of the most challenged books in the United States—titles that are the subject of formal written complaints, filed with a library or school requesting they be removed. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was the fifth-most challenged book during the years 1990–2000. “This is an example of how shabby this campaign has been, why it’s not making any ground,” Acosta said. “The most they’ve achieved is a protest by the mayor of Paris, former Czech president Vaclav Havel and some others in that country, the Polish library association, and the Liberal Party in Sweden. That’s about it. Each time they say something, they tell a bigger lie. It’s not effective. They know nothing about real life in Cuba. “Allegations that may have served them well in their efforts in Czechoslovakia do not work in their campaign against Cuba. For example, in Czechoslovakia they did ban books, so a campaign against book banning had an impact. Here we don’t ban books, so the same allegation falls flat.” In response to this propaganda, Acosta concluded, “The best answer is to get out the truth. The campaign of lies thrives on lack of information. So providing information on the real situation is decisive. “Our instruments in this struggle are words, not the police.” address. By first-class (airmail), send $80. Africa, Asia, and the Middle East: Send $65 drawn on a U.S. bank to above address. Canada: Send Canadian $50 for one-year subscription to Militant, 2238 Dundas St. West, Suite 201, Toronto, ON. Postal Code: M6R 3A9. United Kingdom: £25 for one year by check or international money order made out to CL London, First Floor, 120 Bethnal Green (Entrance in Brick Lane), London, E2 6DG, England. Republic of Ireland and Continental Europe: £50 for one year by check or international money order made out to CL London at above address. France: Send 75 euros for one-year subscription to Diffusion du Militant, P.O. Box 175, 23 rue Lecourbe, 75015 Paris. Iceland: Send 3,500 Icelandic kronur for one-year subscription to Militant, P.O. Box 233, 121 Reykjavík. Sweden, Finland, Norway, Denmark: 400 Swedish kronor for one year. Domargränd 16, S-129 47 Hägersten, Stockholm, Sweden. New Zealand: Send New Zealand $55 to P.O. Box 3025, Auckland, New Zealand. Australia: Send Australian $50 to P.O. Box 164 Campsie, NSW 2194, Australia. Pacific Islands: Send New Zealand $55 to P.O. Box 3025, Auckland, New Zealand. Signed articles by contributors do not necessarily represent the Militant’s views. These are expressed in editorials. UK rulers push ‘Britain First’ in election campaign Communist League candidates promote working-class alternative BY JONATHAN SILBERMAN LONDON—Days after Prime Minister Anthony Blair declared that the UK general election for Parliament would be held May 5, and that the Labour Party would be standing on its economic record, Trade and Industry Secretary Patricia Hewitt announced that the car manufacturing company MG Rover had gone belly up, threatening thousands of jobs. “This shows that when the profit-seeking bosses and capitalist politicians speak of growth, it means one thing for them and another for workers,” said Celia Pugh, Communist League candidate for the Bethnal Green and Bow constituency in London. Pugh was speaking on BBC Radio London April 10 in a debate between candidates in the constituency. “It shows why the League’s campaign advances the need to organize and strengthen the unions, and use union power to meet the bosses’ attacks,” Pugh said. “This is not something that’s limited to an election debate. No matter who wins the election, working people will face the challenge of the capitalist rulers seeking to offload the effects of the crisis onto our backs through attacks at home and wars abroad.” MG Rover employs 6,000 workers at its plant at Longbridge in Birmingham. It is the last British-owned volume car manufacturer. In addition to the Longbridge jobs, another 15,000 jobs in the West Midlands car components industry are threatened by the collapse. Adding his voice to the nothing-can-be-done reaction, Stephen O’Brien, the Conservative Party’s Shadow Industry Secretary, described the car company’s failure as a “deeply depressing day.” Tony Woodley, general secretary of the Transport and General Workers Union, which organizes the production workers at MG Rover, was at Hewitt’s side when she made the bankruptcy announcement. The government could not have done more to protect the workers’ jobs, the union leader said. He and Hewitt spoke of the Labour government’s backing for the company’s negotiations aimed at securing a deal with a Chinese company, Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation (SAIC). The terms of the proposed deal have not been made public. “MG Rover’s books should be opened so that workers can see what’s been going on behind their backs,” said Peter Clifford, Communist League candidate for Edinburgh East. “Through shining a spotlight on what’s been going on, workers can chart a course forward.” Clifford pointed out that last year the MG Rover bosses had pocketed more than £16 million (£1=US $1.89), including salaries and pension contributions, when the company reportedly lost £89 million. British imperialism’s decline The end of the British-owned car industry is a reflection of the decline of British capitalism, which has generated a debate in ruling circles. The Blair administration strategy is to hold firmly onto the coattails of U.S. imperialism, using the alliance with Washington as a lever in competition with rivals in the European Union. London has committed British troops for the occupation of Iraq for the long term, making it clear that any reduction of the force will be closely coordinated with Washington. The government is also planning to commit more troops to Afghanistan as part of the U.S.-led operations in that country. The troops will be part of NATO’s Allied Rapid Reaction Corps. Meanwhile the government is pressing ahead with its reorganization of the UK’s armed forces to bring them into line with the transformation of the U.S. military. The first week of April, Defense Secretary Geoffrey Hoon announced the formation of a new UK Special Forces Regiment. The unit is aimed at ensuring improved support to international expeditionary operations and will come under the command of the Director Special Forces. It will be part of the UK Special Forces group. This sort of initiative was provided for in the 2002 Strategic Defense Review. “Large operations, against foreign states, can only be plausibly conducted if U.S. forces are engaged, either leading a coalition or in NATO,” said a government document published last year. “Our armed forces will need to be interoperable with U.S. command and control structures [and] Militant/Jonathan Silberman Celia Pugh (left) campaigning April 9 in Bethnal Green and Bow constituency in London, where she is the Communist League candidate for Parliament. match the U.S. operational tempo.” This orientation is favored by decisive sections of the ruling class and backed by the Armed Forces’ top brass. It has put a squeeze on the space available for the Conservative Party, for well over a century the main party of the British rulers. Following its huge defeat in the 1997 election, the Conservatives have been thrown into crisis. The party was again trounced in the 2001 elections. Now led by Michael Howard, the party has had four leaders over the last eight years. Coarsening of political discourse The shifting sands of the two main capitalist parties, Labour and Tory, the weakness of British imperialism, and the lack of confidence within the ruling class that either party has a way out of London’s decline are factors in the coarsening of the debate in the bourgeois election campaign. The Labour Party has issued posters with the heads of Tory leaders Michael Howard and Oliver Letwin grafted onto a pig’s bodies and questioning whether the Conservative leaders can be trusted by Muslims. U.S. Supreme Court refuses to hear appeal of Pennsylvania case on ‘neutral reporting privilege’ BY MICHAEL ITALIE On March 28, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed a Pennsylvania court’s ruling to stand that restricts the ability of the media in that state to report on statements by public officials without fear of prosecution. The appeal to the high court by the Troy Publishing Co., a newspaper, and a reporter, revolved around their claim of “neutral reporting privilege” in a 1995 defamation suit brought against the West Chester, Pennsylvania, Daily Local News by local city council members. Dismissing the appeal without comment, the U.S. Supreme Court left standing the October 2004 ruling by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court that found that “neither the United States nor the Pennsylvania Constitutions mandate adoption of the neutral reportage doctrine.” The neutral reportage standard arose out of court rulings in the 1960s and 1970s that granted the media broad immunity from defamation charges for reporting on the statements—regardless of their truthfulness—of both public officials and those whom the courts described as “public figures.” Attorneys for more than two dozen of the largest media outlets in the country had urged the Supreme Court to accept Norton vs. Glenn, and to find that accurate news coverage should be shielded from prosecution. “The fact that one public official is saying scurrilous things about another is information the public is entitled to,” Lucy Dalglish, executive director of Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, told the Associated Press. The Daily Local News had reported in its April 20, 1995, edition on comments by members of the Parkersburg Borough Council during and after a meeting of the local government body. In the article, titled “Slurs, insults drag town into controversy,” the paper reported on remarks by council member William Glenn after the meeting that implied that the mayor and another member of the council were “queers and child molesters.” The trial judge in the case ruled that although Glenn may be sued for his statement, the paper could not be held liable for a factual accounting of his comments. In 2000 a jury found Glenn guilty of defamation and awarded each plaintiff $17,500 in damages. The plaintiffs then appealed the dismissal of charges against the paper. In 2002 they won a favorable ruling and an order for a trial against the paper from a state Superior Court. In its October 2004 decision upholding the Superior Court ruling, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court drew a sharp distinction between the “fair report privilege” and the neutral reportage privilege. “The fair report doctrine,” Chief Justice Ralph Cappy wrote for the state court, “is a common-law privilege protecting media entities which publish fair and accurate reports of governmental proceedings. At issue here, however, is whether there is a constitutional privilege to publish accounts of statements that were not made in the course of official proceedings.” Under such conditions, the court ruled, the “actual malice” doctrine applies. This legal standard allows public officials or figures to sue for defamation if they can prove a media report was made “with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.” The Supreme Court’s refusal to accept the appeal means the charges of defamation against the Daily Local News will go to trial. Howard and Letwin, who are both Jewish, have also been associated by the Labour posters as Shylock or Fagin figures—classic anti-Semitic stereotypes. This poster campaign was attacked for its anti-Semitism and withdrawn. The Tories, for their part, have waged a months-long campaign targeting Blair as a liar who can’t be trusted. Britain First framework The sharper the invective against one another, the more strident the common “Britain First” policies of both parties have become. Chancellor of the Exchequor Gordon Brown has delivered a series of speeches defending “Britishness,” the “United Kingdom,” and the British Empire itself. “The days of Britain having to apologize for our history are over,” said Brown, who chose Tanzania as the place to make these statements, with no hint of shame. “I think we should celebrate much of our past rather than apologize for it and we should talk, rightly so, about British values.” Each of the three major capitalist parties—Labour, Conservatives, and Liberal Democrats—have upped the ante on proposing tightened immigration controls. Under the banner, “It’s not racist to talk about immigration,” Michael Howard has sought to occupy the center stage of the debate. The Conservatives’ proposals, however, are in line with those advanced by Labour and the Liberal Democrats. Home Secretary Charles Clarke claims success in the government having cut asylum applications by 67 percent since October 2002, while strengthening border controls and the stepping up of immigration raids. In response to Howard’s campaign, Labour gave the stage to a former Conservative Party immigration minister who congratulated the government for having prevented 1,000 people a day from coming into the United Kingdom and for the rise in deportations. The anti-immigrant campaign can be expected to improve the fortunes of rightist formations like the UK Independence Party, the newly formed Veritas, and the fascist British National Party. Each of these groups is presenting election campaigns that center Continued on Page 10 Hundreds attend U.S. Women of Color conference BY LEA SHERMAN ARLINGTON, Virginia—Some 350 supporters of women’s rights—the majority Black, Latina, and Asian—gathered here April 1–3 for the Women of Color & Allies Summit. The National Organization for Women (NOW) Foundation organized the event. Many participants were college students. A large number came from New York and New Jersey. The conference included a plenary panel on women’s health and reproductive rights, as well as workshops, such as “Privatizing Social Security: The Economic Security Threat of a Lifetime,” and “Immigrant Women: Sisters in the Struggle.” Forty-five people attended the only workshop held in Spanish, titled “U.S. Terrorism,” which included discussion on racist discrimination and police harassment of immigrants. Zenaida Mendez, one of the conference organizers, told the final plenary session that participants in the workshop called for more translation into Spanish at the next conference. Mendez is Director of Racial Diversity Programs for the NOW Foundation. A contingent of 28 members of Communications Workers of America (CWA) Local 1033 took part. The majority are office workers for the state of New Jersey. Several work for the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) in Trenton. Karine, one of the DMV workers, described harassment since Sept. 11, 2001. This office has 14 workers, almost all of whom are female and Black, she said. The state has installed 18 cameras fixed on the workers as they complete forms for driver’s licenses, to prevent “fraud.” The state also hired investigators, mainly former state troopers who are white, who look over and often lean onto the shoulders of workers as they prepare the license, Karine said. In mid-March, an investigator accused one of the workers of falsifying a license, Karine said, then strip-searched her, and had her handcuffed and arrested. She is now out on $25,000 bond. Her co-workers are working to have their union take up the case and are making plans for a news release and a picket line. All those who registered for the conference were invited to attend the NOW national conference, scheduled for July 1–3 in Nashville, Tennessee. The Militant April 25, 2005 3 Co-Op miners picket Continued from front page of its bosses, Shain Stoddard. Miners say Stoddard is offering between $5.25 and $7.00 an hour for underground coal miners at Co-Op. Wages for underground mining in the U.S. average at least $17 an hour. The picketing miners were fired December 9 for supporting the UMWA. They are demanding their jobs back and ratification of the union representation election held on December 17. The National Labor Relations Board has not issued any decision on the ballots cast by the miners, most of whom back the UMWA. A Co-Op boss, identified by the miners as Shain Stoddard, parked his car in the road, and walked in front of the miners and their supporters to provoke them—without success. “What’s going on here, guys?” he said. Feigning ignorance, he asked the workers, “Who are you picketing?” Stoddard continued asking questions to no response. A haul truck driver delivering coal to the loadout drove past the picket line and loudly honked his horn in support. Stoddard left. “We’re here to demand our jobs back with back pay,” said José Contreras, one of the fired miners. Contreras held a sign that said, “Honk for support.” Miners are pursuing their fight for the union. On April 14, three Co-Op miners will address the meeting of the International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE) Local 9 at the Trapper mine in Craig, Colorado. A delegation of Co-Op miners will also attend the April 18 Changing Woman conference in Farmington, New Mexico, which is sponsored by IUOE Local 953 and the University of New Mexico Law School. The conference will take up discrimination facing women who are working or trying to get jobs in the mines, or who work other non-traditional jobs. It will also discuss how the labor movement can combat such practices. “Picketing helps show the public that the fight is still on,” said Abel Aragón, a retired miner from UMWA Local 9958 Militant/Luis Astorga Shain Stoddard (left), a boss at C.W. Mining, confronts Co-Op miners picketing C.W. Mining’s Rail Co. Load Out near Huntington, Utah, April 13. who joined the picket line of 10 people. Aragón invited two fellow UMWA retirees, who came to hear news on the Co-Op struggle and express their solidarity just before the picket line began. All three joined the picket. “This helps get people to support the fight,” Aragón said. “See you next time.” Regional forums will promote Militant Fighting Fund BY ARGIRIS MALAPANIS Regional forums will be held in Atlanta, Chicago, and Pittsburgh the next two weeks to help focus efforts on mobilizing support to defeat a lawsuit filed by the owners of a coal company in Utah against the Militant, the Socialist Workers Party, and other defendants. Workers at this company, C.W. Mining, have been waging a tenacious union-organizing struggle for 18 months (see accompanying article on this page). In a telephone interview, Norton Sandler, who is organizing these forums, said that Paul Mailhot from Salt Lake City, Utah, will be the featured speaker at the events in Atlanta on April 16 and in Pittsburgh on April 23. Mailhot is helping to organize the endorsement and fund raising efforts for the Militant Fighting Fund in that area. The fund was set up last year to raise financial resources for the campaign to defend the Militant and SWP against this harassment lawsuit. John Studer, executive director of the Political Rights Defense Fund (PRDF), will speak April 23 at a similar forum in Chicago, Sandler said. PRDF has a history of raising funds and publicizing cases where the Bill of Rights and workers’ rights are at stake dating back to the early 1970s. PRDF has adopted this case and is organizing the Militant Fighting Fund. The public forums in Atlanta, Chicago, and Pittsburgh will be held in conjunction with national meetings of socialist workers who are members of the UNITE, United Food and Commercial Workers, and United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) unions. Sandler said all supporters of the case and other defenders of democratic rights from nearby cities are encouraged to attend and bring co-workers, friends, and family members along. C.W. Mining, which manages the Co-Op mine, and the International Association of United Workers Union (IAUWU), which miners describe as a company union, filed a sweeping lawsuit in September 2004 against the UMWA and its international officers, 17 miners involved in the hard-fought campaign to organize the UMWA at the mine, the major Utah dailies the Salt Lake Tribune and Deseret Morning News, the Militant, the SWP, Utah AFL-CIO, Jobs with Justice, and other defendants. Last December, attorneys for the plaintiffs submitted to the court an amended complaint. About 24 pages of the 70-page complaint allege defamations by the Militant Defend Workers Rights, Freedom of the Press, and the Right to Free Speech! Support the fight by the Militant and the Socialist Workers Party against the Co-Op coal bosses harassment lawsuit. April 16—Atlanta: hear Paul Mailhot. For information call (404) 768-1709. April 23—Pittsburgh: hear Paul Mailhot. For information call (412) 365-1090. April 23—Chicago: hear John Studer, Political Rights Defense Fund executive director. For information call (773) 890-1190. 4 against C.W. Mining and the IAUWU. The suit names the SWP as a defendant on the basis of the false claim that the party “owns and controls” the socialist newsweekly. Salt Lake City attorneys Randy Dryer and Michael Petrogeorge represent the Militant and the SWP. The two lawyers have filed a motion to dismiss the case. The plaintiffs’ response to this motion is due by April 15. Attorneys for the Militant and the SWP will then have seven days to submit their rebuttal. Judge Dee Benson, who is presiding over the case, will subsequently set a schedule for oral arguments on the motions to dismiss filed by the various defendants in this lawsuit. On April 7, company and IAUWU attorneys Carl Kingston and Mark Hansen notified the court that they were stipulating that their case against University of Utah professor Hans Ehrbar had been dismissed without prejudice because they had not served him with notification of the suit within the time limit required by Utah law. “We will use the upcoming forums to explain the issues involved in this case, which will get a hearing from defenders of freedom of the press and freedom of speech everywhere,” said Sandler. “Coming out of these forums we will launch a drive to win endorsers for PRDF’s Militant Fighting Fund and to raise the tens of thousands of dollars needed to cover legal expenses for defending the Militant and the Socialist Workers Party. “The initial funds raised to defend the Militant and the SWP have been exhausted,” Sandler noted. “Thousands more will be spent in preparing the next legal brief and in getting ready for a hearing before the presiding judge. And, we must prepare for the expenses for legal work and publicity to continue regardless of the outcome of the first round of decisions on the lawsuit,” he said. “The bosses at Co-Op and the IAUWU are challenging the right of workers involved in a struggle to reach out for support and talk to the press about the conditions they face at the Co-Op mine, safety on the job, and their meager wages,” Sandler continued. “They accuse the UMWA of being a ‘rabid labor union’ and the workers at the mine as not being a reputable source for newspapers to quote. These are issues that can impact any struggle for a union, as workers attempt to defend themselves more and more. “The battle at the Co-Op mine that began in September 2003 has drawn wide attention in Utah and elsewhere,” Sandler said. “But the bosses ask the court to view this as a private matter between them and individual miners. They challenge First Amend- ment protections for newspapers reporting on what has become a very public dispute between a company intent on maintaining exploitative conditions and mine workers fighting for a union, better wages, safety, and dignity.” C.W. Mining insists that anything but their own interpretation of decisions by government bodies like the National Labor Relations Board is slanderous, Sandler explained. “They also claim the IAUWU is a real union, even though the workers insist it has never represented their interests and has always sided with the bosses and is run by relatives of the owners,” he continued. “The NLRB has ruled that not a single officer of the IAUWU is eligible to have their vote counted in the union representation election held at the mine last December, because of the family ties those individuals have to the bosses and shareholders of the company.” Sandler said he urges all defenders of democratic rights in the broad regions around Atlanta, Chicago, and Pittsburgh to attend the upcoming forums and donate to the Militant Fighting Fund. To find out how to help, or to make a contribution, contact PRDF at Box 761 Church Street Station, New York, NY 10007, or by e-mail at [email protected]. Utah coal bosses pursue harassment lawsuit C.W. Mining lawyers answers miners’ motion to dismiss case BY PAT MILLER SALT LAKE CITY—“Defendants offer no evidence to controvert the allegations of the Amended Complaint,” opens the reply by C.W. Mining to 17 coal miners who have asked a federal district court in Utah to dismiss a lawsuit aimed at thwarting their efforts to unionize and win better conditions (see article above). The lawsuit launched by coal bosses at the Co-Op mine in Huntington, Utah, in September 2004 states that the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA), its officers, and 17 individual Co-Op miners are guilty of unfair labor practices and defamation; and that the Salt Lake Tribune and Deseret Morning News, the Militant and Socialist Workers Party, Utah AFL-CIO, Jobs with Justice, and numerous individuals have slandered C.W. Mining and the companyaffiliated International Association of United Workers Union (IAUWU). The bosses claim that fraud and conspiracy are involved in the actions by the UMWA, the miners, and the other defendants, and that the federal district court, not the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), is the proper jurisdiction to review their allegations. They ask the court to grant them discovery and the new brief filed by the company makes several references to the prospect of a jury trial. The charge of unfair labor practices hinges on the company’s contention that the IAUWU is a legitimate union that represents workers at the mine. The bosses say efforts of Co-Op miners to bring in the The Militant April 25, 2005 UMWA constitute an illegal practice by the UMWA and individual miners involved in that effort. Co-Op miners have testified that the IAUWU is a fraud and has no record of coming to the aid of individual miners against company attacks on safety, work conditions, or pay. The NLRB has ruled that no officer of the IAUWU or any other relatives of the owners working at the mine could vote in the union representation election held Dec. 17, 2004. The votes of 27 miners challenged by the company are being reviewed by the NLRB and have yet to be counted. C.W. Mining fired these 27 miners before the union vote, saying they had refused to show additional proof of eligibility to work in the United States. Most workers at the mine are originally from Mexico and had been employed by C.W. Mining for years. Workers counter that the company had the same work documents for them throughout their employment and fired them a week before the union vote to retaliate against their union-organizing efforts. Mine owners and company union brief In the bosses’ reply to the miners’ motion to dismiss the lawsuit, C.W. Mining’s attorneys detail statements of each miner published in newspapers that they claim are defamatory. For instance, this latest brief quotes Celso Panduro, one of the leaders of the UMWA organizing effort, saying, “Every time we had asked for better working conditions they told us to keep our heads down and keep working or we could be out the door.” Gonzalo Salazar, another worker at the Co-Op mine involved in the efforts to win the union there, is quoted as saying, “If I call in sick for just one day, I lose my bonus for as long as the bosses want me to lose it.” According to C.W. Mining attorneys, such “statements were made with knowledge of their falsity, or with reckless disregard as to their truth or falsity, and made with malice.” Co-Op miners say they have nothing to retract about what they have told the media. They insist their statements are truthful and are the reasons why they have been fighting to bring in a real union at the mine. The CoOp miners’ struggle began in September 2003 after the company tried to fire supporters of the UMWA working at the mine. C.W. Mining locked out 75 workers who protested these company actions, but was forced to rehire them 10 months later after an NLRB-brokered agreement between the company and the UMWA. The coal bosses later fired nearly all supporters of the union shortly before the union representation vote in December. “We had a leadership meeting of the CoOp miners last week where we talked about the C.W. Mining lawsuit,” said Bill Estrada, one of the leaders of the union-organizing fight at the mine. “All of us found it incredible that the bosses challenge everything we have said about our wages, treatment, and conditions at the mine. They say what we have said is defamation, but we have simply stated what we know from experience and the reasons we have put up such a fight for the union at the mine.” ‘New International’ sales campaign off, running BY MARTÍN KOPPEL The campaign to sell New International is off and running. Campaigners have been going to mine portals in northern Appalachia, university campuses in New Jersey, Iowa towns affected by firings of immigrant workers, and elsewhere to get the two newest issues of the Marxist magazine into the hands of working people and youth. In the first two weeks of the five-month campaign, 852 copies have been sold of the magazine’s new issues in English and Spanish (see front-page ad). These issues feature “Capitalism’s Long Hot Winter has Begun” and “Our Politics Start with the World,” which present a strategic understanding of the class struggle to help chart a course for working people to organize and change the world in the interests of the vast majority. In coal country in western Pennsylvania, socialist workers from Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Hazleton, Pennsylvania, visited mine portals and mining communities to spread the use of these political weapons. Tony Lancaster from Pittsburgh writes that a laid-off coal miner there “bought the two New Internationals. He pointed to a peace flag in his yard he had erected when Washington launched the war on Iraq. When he looked at the charts and graphs in New International no. 12, showing facts and figures about U.S. military spending and deployment, he said, ‘I’ve got to have this.’” Similarly, in Atlanta, Arlene Rubinstein reports that a co-worker in the garment shop where she works has already started reading “Their Transformation and Ours” and discussing it with her. Originally from Eritrea, he commented on the charts “on the number of bases and installations under consideration on African soil”—where Washington is preparing for future wars of plunder. Near Miami, at the Point Blank Body Armor plant, fellow garment workers were pleased to see their successful union-organizing fight mentioned in Nueva Internacional no. 6, says Eric Simpson. This drew their interest in the magazine’s explanation of the bosses’ antilabor offensive, the weakened state of the unions today, and the need to use and extend union power. One of the workers there “picked up her copy as soon as it became available,” Simpson said. Supporters of the magazine from the Midwest spent a weekend campaigning in several towns in Iowa after mass firings of foreign-born meat packers by the bosses at Tyson Foods in Perry and Waterloo. In New International sales campaign March 26 – August 15 Country NEW ZEALAND Auckland Christchurch N.Z. total CANADA UNITED STATES NE Pennsylvania Cleveland Miami Atlanta Seattle Washington, D.C. Houston Philadelphia New York Pittsburgh Price, UT Chicago Omaha Los Angeles Detroit Tampa Boston San Francisco Craig, CO Newark Des Moines Twin Cities Birmingham U.S. total UNITED KINGDOM Edinburgh London UK total AUSTRALIA SWEDEN ICELAND Int’l totals Goal Sold % 30 20 50 60 26 7 33 22 87% 35% 66% 37% 40 30 60 100 60 80 80 75 250 80 50 100 25 200 60 55 120 175 40 125 80 105 50 1,990 24 16 30 48 28 35 34 31 102 31 19 38 9 71 21 19 33 46 10 30 17 21 6 719 60% 53% 50% 48% 47% 44% 43% 41% 41% 39% 38% 38% 36% 36% 35% 35% 28% 26% 25% 24% 21% 20% 12% 35% 35 120 155 50 40 32 2,427 14 39 53 15 7 3 852 40% 33% 34% 30% 18% 9% 35% a transparent attempt at intimidating the workforce, the bosses fired dozens of workers they alleged did not have valid Social Security documents, regardless of previous employment screening or years of service. A construction worker in West Liberty bought Nueva Internacional no. 7 after studying its graphic depicting the swath of darkness that covers much of the semicolonial world because of the lack of electricity. He was interested because it not only showed the brutal gulf in conditions in the world, but that there is a way for working people to “unify to fight these conditions and ultimately to take power,” said Mike Ellis from Chicago. Local areas have adopted quotas that add up to 2,427, but initial results show this is well below what can be achieved for a fivemonth campaign running through August 15. In the first two weeks, a number of areas have already sold a third or more of their quotas, and many are planning to rediscuss and increase them. The Militant will wait a couple of weeks to report the overall goal, taking into account the revised quotas. Militant/Sara Lobman Michael Ortega, SWP candidate for New Jersey State Assembly District 28, campaigns April 10 in Morristown, New Jersey, using Militant and New International. Nearly 300 subscribe in first week of ‘Militant’ sub drive BY PAUL PEDERSON Militant supporters around the United States and in other countries have kicked off the seven-week subscription drive with a bang. They sent in 291 subscriptions to the socialist newsweekly to the business office by the end of the first week of the drive. This is 8 percent, or 98 subscriptions, ahead of schedule. On top of the chart in the United States are distributors in Newark, New Jersey, who netted 44 percent of their seven-week quota of 55 subs over the last seven days. This “target week” of the circulation campaign coincided with the first week of campaigning for Socialist Workers Party candidates for New Jersey governor and state assembly. “We had a fabulous start to the circulation drive,” said Angela Lariscy, the SWP candidate for governor in New Jersey. “By next week supporters in Newark will discuss by how much to raise our quota.” SWP campaign supporters sold six subscriptions and three copies of the new issues of the Marxist magazine New International (see front-page ad) at an all-day table at Rutgers University’s New Brunswick campus. “A student who bought a subscription and a copy of the Spanish translation of NI no. 13 came that evening to a meeting of students and other youth organizing to attend the world youth festival in Caracas, Venezuela, ‘Militant‘ Subscription Drive April 2–May 22 Week 1 of 7 Country NEW ZEALAND Auckland Christchurch N.Z. total SWEDEN UNITED STATES Newark Twin Cities Des Moines Chicago Washington, D.C. Omaha NE Pennsylvania San Francisco Boston New York Houston Tampa Detroit Los Angeles Atlanta Cleveland Seattle Miami Craig, CO Price, UT Birmingham Philadelphia Pittsburgh U.S. total AUSTRALIA UNITED KINGDOM Edinburgh London UK total CANADA ICELAND Int’l totals Goal/Should be Goal Sold % 20 15 35 16 11 4 15 5 55% 27% 43% 31% 55 70 50 65 55 25 40 25 60 115 50 30 28 90 40 35 35 65 20 50 25 50 50 1128 30 24 23 16 20 16 7 10 6 14 26 10 6 5 16 7 5 5 8 2 5 2 4 4 241 6 44% 33% 32% 31% 29% 28% 25% 24% 23% 23% 20% 20% 18% 18% 18% 14% 14% 12% 10% 10% 8% 8% 8% 21% 20% 20 40 60 60 20 1349 1350 3 9 12 11 1 291 193 15% 23% 20% 18% 5% 22% 14% in August,” Lariscy reported. “The next night she came to the Militant Labor Forum in Newark and brought two friends, one of whom bought a subscription and a copy of New International no. 12.” Partisans of the Militant in Los Angeles took the paper to a British Petroleum-operated refinery in Carson, California, to talk to workers about the explosion that killed 15 workers at BP’s facility in Texas City, Texas. Paper, Allied-Industrial, Chemical and Energy union members told the socialists the bosses had organized a safety meeting that day where they discussed the refinery blast in Texas City. The unionists reported that the bosses’ main message at the meeting had been that the workers are responsible for their own safety. “That’s the real story,” one of them commented, pointing to the headline in the Militant article that places responsibility squarely where it belongs: on the bosses and their speed-up to increase profits at the expense of workers’ lives and limbs. Two workers decided to subscribe to the Militant. One also purchased both of the new issues of New International. Militant Fund quotas now top int’l goal BY SAM MANUEL to send in accounts of their progress each WASHINGTON, D.C.—Last week, week that can be included in this column. partisans of the Militant in Los Angeles inChecks or money orders should be made creased by $1,000 their quota for the paper’s out to The Militant, earmarked “Spring Fund $90,000 spring fund drive. The quota in San Drive,” and sent to the Militant at 306 W. Francisco has been raised by $300. Support37th St., 10th floor, New York, NY 10018. ers of the socialist newsweekly in France adopted a quota of $300 and those in the United Kingdom $90,000 Militant Fund increased theirs by $200. These welcome changes mean that local March 26–May 22: Week 2 of 8 quotas from Militant supporters in some 30 cities around the world Goal Paid % now add up to $91,335—above ICELAND 200 20 10% the international target. 1,230 100 8% CANADA That’s progress. The challenge NEW ZEALAND * remains, however, to speed up the pace of collections to meet Auckland 1,750 183 10% the goal by the May 22 deadline 800 26 3% Christchurch while having a weekly flow of SWEDEN 800 40 5% contributions coming in. 750 10 1% AUSTRALIA Frank Forrestal, who helps organize the fund effort in the 300 0 0% FRANCE Los Angeles area, said 43 indiUNITED KINGDOM* 700 0 0% viduals have made pledges there UNITED STATES amounting to $7,825 towards the 700 200 29% Other local quota of $9,000. They are planning a fund event for early NE Pennsylvania 1,500 400 27% May and have sent out a mailing New York 11,000 2,586 24% to long-term subscribers to solicit 3,000 700 23% Philadelphia contributions to the fund. As this issue goes to press, the 2,500 475 19% Detroit Militant has received $9,475 from 4,000 600 15% Price, UT contributions—some $13,000 Los Angeles * 9,000 1,100 12% short of the mark the second 6,000 700 12% Seattle week of the drive. For the remaining six weeks of the campaign, 3,750 390 10% Newark about $13,500 is needed weekly Omaha 355 35 10% to meet the goal. A regular flow 1,100 100 9% Des Moines of income is necessary to meet 3,000 245 8% Washington basic operating expenses, which in addition to costs for rent and Chicago 4,000 320 8% utilities, include travel to cover the 3,300 250 8% Boston struggles of workers and farmers 3,500 250 7% Houston in the United States and around 9,500 500 5% San Francisco* the world. Pittsburgh 2,500 100 4% The Militant is funded solely through the contributions of 1,400 50 4% Miami workers, farmers, and others Twin Cities * 4,800 90 2% who value the paper’s irreplace4,300 5 0% Atlanta able role in growing fights for the 1,300 0 0% Birmingham right to organize unions and to use them to oppose productivity speed 1,000 0 0% Cleveland ups, weakening of safety provi1,800 0 0% Craig, CO sions, wage cuts and the broader 1,500 0 0% Tampa attacks by the wealthy rulers to 91,335 9,475 10% Totals squeeze out more profits by driv90,000 22,500 25% Should be ing down the standard of living of workers and farmers worldwide. Raised goal * Militant readers are encouraged The Militant April 25, 2005 5 There Is No Peace: 60 Years Since End of World War II World War II: Three wars in one The following consists of major excerpts from an article that first appeared in the summer 1959 issue of the International Socialist Review, a predecessor of New International, a magazine of Marxist politics and theory. We are publishing it here as the fifth installment of this column that will appear regularly this year—the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II—to tell the truth about the second worldwide interimperialist slaughter and its outcome. The article was originally published under the headline, “World War II: Three Wars in One,” and the subheading, “Do the political patterns of World War II suggest lessons in the struggle for peace today? The record offers a way of testing some current issues in dispute.” It is copyright © New International. Reprinted by permission. Subheadings are by the Militant. Footnotes appear at the end of the article on page 9. BY DANIEL ROBERTS Among many people friendly to the Soviet Union the belief exists that the only practical hope for peace lies in Washington and Moscow reaching an agreement to give up war as an instrument of policy. As spokesmen of the Communist Party often put it, all that is needed to end the cold war and the danger of nuclear conflict is to restore the alliance that existed between America and the Soviet Union during World War II. They blame [President Harry S.] Truman for breaking off Roosevelt’s alleged policy of friendship for the USSR. They blame [Secretary of State John Foster] Dulles for worsening the anti-Soviet trend. Their program for rectifying this situation boils downs to a simple prescription: work within the Democratic Party. By helping Democrats to win office, they maintain, it is possible to influence the party in the direction of a “people’s coalition”—such as existed in America under “FDR” during World War II—thus strengthening the “forces for peace.” Against this policy of class collaboration, the Socialist Workers Party advocates following socialist principles in the struggle for peace. These begin with opposition to capitalist candidates, no matter what demagogic labels they may wear. The SWP favors doing everything possible to popularize socialism, including running socialist candidates for office. The SWP opposes company unionism in the political struggle as well as the wage struggle and supports the trends in both fields toward independence and militancy. The SWP seeks, as the alternative to war, a socialist America. These views are attacked by CP leaders as “sectarian,” “divisive,” “utopian” and worse. British cavalry advances against Axis powers in North Africa. “Desert campaigns” in World War II were fought for redivision of colonies among imperialist powers. peace and the road to socialism. The fate of tens of millions, in fact the fate of all mankind, hinges on coming up with a correct answer. The CP’s proposals hark back to an earlier appraisal of the problems of war, peace, defense of the Soviet Union and the struggle against reaction. This was their analysis of the character of World War II and their estimate of the Allied camp as a “democratic,” “people’s” coalition against fascism. The present policy of the CP is an extension of that position, just as the SWP’s policy today is an extension of the position it took during World War II. It can therefore prove useful to review the differences of that time, for it is possible to check them against what actually happened and thus see who turned out to be right. Obviously this is highly relevant to the CP’s insistence upon a return to the political patterns of World War II. Even more important than who was right, however, study of the actual course of history in the light of prognosis can offer us better understanding of the class forces involved in World War II, how that colossal conflict affected them, and what direction they are moving in today. On that basis it should prove considerably easier to work out realistic political policies for the period before us. Were they imperialists? A basic premise offered by Communist leaders under Stalin’s influence was that the powers allied to the Soviet Union in World War II became historically progresStruggle for peace, road to socialism sive through their pact with the workers Who is right? The question is not unstate. From September 1939 to June 1941 important, for it involves the struggle for this proposition benefited the Axis powers. British, French and American war aims were denounced as imperialistic— which they certainly were; German war The Socialist Workers Party in World War II aims were presented by James P. Cannon as in the interests of Preparing the communist workers movement in the national self-deUnited States to stand against the patriotic wave inside fense—which they the workers movement supporting the imperialist certainly were not.1 slaughter and to campaign against wartime censorship, When Hitler atrepression, and antiunion assaults. $24.95 tacked the Soviet Union and Stalin Fighting Racism in World War II hastily concluded an by C.L.R. James and others alliance with Britain and the United Week-by-week account of the struggle States, signs were against racism in the United States, at once reversed.2 1939-45 $21.95 The Axis countries alone now pursued New International no. 7 reactionary impeincludes rialist objectives, “The communist antiwar program whereas the Ameri1940-1969” can-British- Russian alliance pursued “1945: When U.S. troops said democratic, nation‘No!’” by Mary-Alice Waters $12 al-liberationist—in short, historically progressive—goals. For further reading Order from: www.pathfinderpress.com 6 The Militant April 25, 2005 This still remains the official CP version of the character of the second world war. In order to justify such switches, Communist Party leaders had to discard completely Lenin’s conclusions about the nature of imperialism. They had to revive, in effect, the notorious position propounded by the Social Democratic theoretician Karl Kautsky during World War I; namely, that imperialism is but one of alternative policies that the major capitalist powers are free to follow, that it is “Interlaced with the utterly reactionary fight between the imperialist wolves—the Axis and the Allies—were two other wars of entirely different character: defense of Soviet Union and colonial revolts.” not organic to the stage of big business rule. In World War I, German, French, British, Italian, Russian and American “socialists” utilized Kautsky’s arguments to justify support for their respective governments…. Highest, last stage of capitalism To refute Kautsky, Lenin showed by painstaking economic and historical analysis that “imperialism...represents a special stage in the development of capitalism”; i.e., imperialism is synonymous with Western capitalism since the turn of the twentieth century; that it is, in fact, the last or highest stage of capitalism itself.3 According to Lenin, one of the features of imperialism is the rule of financial oligarchies (such as America’s sixty wealthiest families) in the major capitalist countries. The foreign policy pursued by any of the major capitalist powers cannot be anything but imperialistic; that is, designed to exploit other countries. Wars between major capitalist powers are inevitably conflicts involving “redivision” of the world. They have no progressive content and can acquire none. Imperialism threatens civilization with total destruction. Its wars spread untold misery. Consequently, said Lenin, “Imperialism is the eve of the proletarian social revolution. This has been confirmed since 1917 on a world-wide scale.” At bottom of the dispute over the war question between the Communist Party and the Socialist Workers Party—between Stalinism and Trotskyism—involved the validity of Lenin’s characterization of imperialism. It is still involved in the dis- pute over how best to fight for peace. The Socialist Workers Party has adhered to the Leninist criteria; the Communist Party has abandoned them.4 It should be emphasized that whether or not workers ought to defend the Soviet Union from imperialist attack is not at issue. From the beginning, the Socialist Workers Party has supported unconditional defense of the workers state, regardless of its leadership. Likewise not at issue is the right of the Soviet government to make military alliances with one group of imperialist powers against a different group—or to switch alliances if need be. What is in dispute is whether or not socialists should offer political support to the imperialist ally of the Soviet Union and whether or not they should help expose that ally’s true war aims and oppose them. In proposing that socialists give no political support to any of the major capitalist powers during the war, the Socialist Workers Party held to Leninism, which taught in the first years of the Soviet Union’s existence that while the workers state might be compelled to sign a temporary agreement with one or another imperialist power, this must not be permitted to alter socialist opposition to the imperialist government. Big business rules ‘democracies’ Some substantial facts in World War II spoke for the correctness of this position. In Britain, France and the United States, big business ruled as unquestionably as in Germany, Italy and Japan…. [I]n the U.S. the Smith “Gag” Act was passed in 1940 and applied shortly thereafter against eighteen leading members of the Socialist Workers Party and of the Minneapolis Truck drivers Local 544-CIO [for leading labor opposition to entering the imperialist war]. In their colonies and semi-colonies, British, French and American imperialism ruled with totalitarian brutality. The U.S., for example, governed through military dictators in most of Latin America…. Both the Axis and the British-FrenchAmerican powers sought either to retain or to acquire colonies, markets, sources of raw material and areas of cheap labor where capital could be invested at a high rate of profit. This substantiated once again what Lenin had noted about the tendency to imperialist redivision of the world among the great powers. Axis, Allies hate October Revolution As the vast slaughter unfolded, the SWP called attention to important additional facts. Each of the warring capitalist camps displayed in turn its mortal enmity to the land of the October 1917 Revolution. Thus in 1940, when the Soviet Union attacked Finland, the French, British and American imperialists prepared to intervene militarily in defense of their outpost…. Foreshadowing American postwar policy of “containing communism” within a network of military bases, Roosevelt’s Secretary of the Navy, Frank Knox, declared that “the U.S. must police the world for the next hundred years.” In anticipation of the type of rule they wished to impose in Europe, the Allies maintained a stable of kings, queens and capitalist politicians of every variety heading up “governments-in-exile.” At the end of the war, the Allies foisted a number of them on European peoples against their will (for instance, in Greece)…. In Japan, [General Douglas] MacArthur carefully protected the divine Mikado from popular resentment…. But didn’t the U.S. alliance with the Soviet Union mark a departure from imperialist policy? Didn’t it reflect democratic forces in American government, which came to recognize the menace of Nazism and to see the need for united action to defeat it? Imperialist statesmen are quite capable of giving revolutionary forces a temporary assist if they calculate that it will serve their own ends. The Kaiser provided Lenin with a sealed train, let it be recalled; yet it never occurred to Lenin to regard this as evidence of a “democratic” ingredient in the Hohenzollern dynasty. When Lenin’s government came to power, too, imperialist powers concluded temporary agreements There Is No Peace: 60 Years Since End of World War II with the workers state for the sake of advantages against imperialist rivals. (These, of course, also brought advantages to the Soviet Union.) The most famous of them in the early days of the Soviet republic was the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, which German imperialism decided would secure the release of armies from the Russian front for use in the western trenches. That was not taken as a reflection of “democratic” forces in the German General Staff. (Even Hitler signed a pact with Stalin that meant conceding considerable territory to the Soviet Union.) In World War II, pursuing its goal of ultimate world domination, American imperialism had to decide whether it should seek to destroy the Soviet Union before or after reducing its rivals to the status of vassals. (Hitler was compelled to make a similar choice at the beginning of the war.) American imperialism elected to defeat its imperialist rivals first, taking a chance on carving up the Soviet Union later. Once the Axis had been defeated, American imperialism lost no time in regrouping its capitalist foes and allies alike in a world crusade against “communism.” The cold war thus did not represent a reversion to imperialism but simply the succeeding phase of a policy aiming at exploitation of the entire globe. What other rational explanation can be offered for the rapidity with which America’s rulers shifted in 1945 from alliance with the Soviet Union to construction of a military machine equipped with sufficient nuclear poisons to “overkill” all mankind sixty or seventy times? World War II essentially imperialist World War II was thus essentially imperialist in character. But interimperialist rivalries, while predominant, were far from exclusive in the sanguinary conflict. In this it differed from World War I except for the closing phase of that slaughter. Interlaced with the utterly reactionary fight among the imperialist wolves were two other wars of quite different character. These two wars were the Soviet Union’s defense against Germany and China’s struggle for national liberation from Japan. That both the Soviet Union and China were allied with a reactionary imperialist bloc did not lessen the progressive character of their struggles just as it did not lessen the reactionary character of their allies. In addition, a number of other essentially independent working-class and independent colonial-freedom movements took shape or developed at heightened speeds during the second world war. To take a correct position on these struggles, socialists had to separate them out and consider them on their own merits; that is, in relation to their class content and their effect on the world-wide movement for socialism…. Defense of the Soviet Union [The Socialist Workers Party and world movement it was part of] kept in sight the basic economic and social institutions that were established by the October Revolution—state monopoly of foreign trade, the planned economy, the anti-capitalist structure of government, the socialist outlook of the masses. No matter how deeply these had degenerated under Stalin’s regime, [they] held that the Soviet institutions still added up to a workers state. From this it followed that the socialist opposition to Stalinism could in no way accede to imperialist intervention in Soviet affairs. It was the job of the Soviet working people— and no one else—to get rid of Stalinist tyranny and restore proletarian democracy. Those in socialist opposition to Stalinism, in fact, in order to advance the worldwide struggle for socialism, were duty-bound to serve as the best defenders of the Soviet Union. In 1940, after the outbreak of World War II, [Bolshevik leader Leon] Trotsky wrote: “Those who cannot defend old positions will never conquer new ones.... The defense of the USSR coincides in principle with the preparation of the world proletarian revolution.” Heroic resistance of toilers in USSR Events have fully confirmed the view that the possibility of new revolutionary conquests was linked to the defense of “old positions.” The heroic resistance of the Soviet workers and peasants saved the USSR after Stalin’s policies had brought the work- ers state to the verge of catastrophic defeat.5 With the first Soviet victories, a resistance movement that had already begun to take shape in many parts of Europe against the Nazis and the collaborationist bourgeoisie gained revolutionary scope. Partisan forces began operating throughout Eastern Europe, reinforcing Soviet guerrillas behind the German lines. In Yugoslavia, partisans, spearheaded by proletarian brigades, pinned down considerable German forces even before the Nazi invasion of the USSR. The Yugoslavs, under Tito’s leadership, rendered valiant aid in the defense of the Soviet Union. But they too needed the further inspiration of Soviet victories to forge ahead to their own victory and the establishment of a workers state. In Greece, another mass revolutionary movement—the ELAS partisans—in 1943 gained control of the entire country except for Athens, then lost it when the Greek Communist party leadership obeyed Stalin’s orders to yield power to the British in accordance with the secret deal he had made at Yalta and Tehran with the imperialist statesmen Churchill and Roosevelt. Impact of Soviet victories The impact of the Soviet victories decisively shaped the political evolution of the French resistance movement. The working class gained ascendancy within it, and the Communist Party acquired effective leadership. In Italy, too, the Soviet victories “The heroic resistance of workers and peasants saved USSR after Stalin’s policies had brought workers state to the verge of catastrophic defeat.” spurred the revolutionary movement that toppled Mussolini in August 1943 and that continued to unfold against both the German occupation in the north and the Allied occupation in the south. In Germany, the accumulation of military catastrophes broke the apathy that had settled upon the working class following Hitler’s victory in 1933. The beginnings of a revolutionary movement appeared as the Nazi regime collapsed. The Soviet victories were an element in the resurgence of socialist sentiment among the British workers. In 1945 they booted Churchill out of office and put the Labour Party in power…. Stalin and the Communist Party leaders who made a cult of his personality did not agree with Trotsky that “The defense of the USSR coincides in principle with the preparation of the world proletarian revolution.” As a caste enjoying special privileges in the Soviet Union, the Stalinist bureaucracy feared that victorious socialist revolutions in Western Europe would inspire the Soviet workers to oust them from power. One of the reflections of this fear was the Stalinist theory that socialist aims had to be discarded in World War II, or indefinitely postponed, since the conflict—again according to Stalinist theory—was essentially a struggle between democracy and fascism. Therefore, to believe this leadership, the struggle for socialism could only play into the hands of the fascists. This outlook received its most glaring expression in Stalin’s chauvinistic manner of waging the war. All appeals to socialist sentiments were dropped. Russian patriotic traditions replaced them. Hatred for the German people was a dominant theme in Soviet propaganda, a policy that did much to reinforce the Nazi hold on the German masses. Stalin’s secret deals with imperialists Other equally reactionary consequences followed. Stalin’s secret deals with Roosevelt and Churchill called for retaining capitalism in power throughout Europe, with the Soviet Union allotted the buffer zone, which it had taken anyway in Eastern Europe for purposes of military defense. Even in Bulgaria and Rumania, the Getty Images In the five-month battle in 1942–43 to defend Stalingrad from attack by Nazi-led army, more than 1 million Russians died. The defeat of the German imperialist army was a turning point in defending the Soviet Union and pushing back Hitler’s offensive. USSR’s immediate neighbors, decrees were issued as the Red Army marched across the border that “the existing social structure” was not to be altered, although the working people were organizing strikes, dividing up landlords’ estates and getting rid of the fascist officials. Only after American imperialism—with the help of the Communist parties—had stabilized capitalist rule in Western Europe to some degree, had launched the cold war, was testing atomic bombs in the Pacific and stockpiling nuclear weapons, did the Kremlin reluctantly take the defensive measure of abolishing capitalist rule in Eastern Europe by bureaucratic-military means…. and its increasingly abject dependence on American imperialism lost it any measure of acquiescence it might have enjoyed among the masses during the war. With China’s victory, the people set out to get rid of this hated government. In accordance with the Kremlin’s characterization of World War II, the Chinese followers of Stalin did not steer toward socialist aims. They did everything possible to bolster Chiang Kai-shek despite repeated brush-offs from the dictator. China in their opinion was not ripe for an economic and social overturn. Chinese capitalism still had a historic mission to accomplish and they were willing to do what they could to maintain it. When the Chinese people took the road of economic and social revolution, however, the Communist Party found itself propelled into leadership. As in the case of Tito in Yugoslavia, Mao disregarded Stalin’s directives. (At the outset of the civil war, Stalin recognized Chiang Kai-shek’s regime as the legitimate Chinese government and urged Mao Tse-tung to make a deal with the dictator.) Mao also disregarded his own theories. The alternative was to be flattened by the revolutionary steamroller. Thus China—coveted prize of both Japanese and American imperialism— continuing the struggle begun against Japan, underwent a profound social and economic revolution, escaped all wouldbe imperialist overlords and emerged as an independent power, a result Roosevelt had not anticipated when he included China in his wartime alliance.6 … Defense of China The third war, intermingled with the imperialist conflict between the Allies and the Axis, was China’s struggle against Japan…. Japanese capitalism had reached the imperialist stage. China was a semi-colony that had yet to achieve the stage of an integrated nation. Lenin long ago pointed out that the working class in the imperialist centers had everything to gain from making common cause with the colonial bourgeoisie in such struggles while retaining political independence due to the limitations inherent in a bourgeois nationalist leadership. Applying this concept, the Trotskyists remained in political opposition to the Chiang [Kai-shek] dictatorship but subordinated this opposition to the defense of China. How well the Trotskyist estimate corresponded to the objective course of this war can be seen in retrospect. The Chinese people India’s anticolonial revolt sought from 1931 to resist the encroachments In August 1942 when mass strikes of Japanese imperialism, and, by shaking off Continued on Page 9 the Japanese yoke, to win national liberation from all imperialist powers, including the U.S. Chiang’s incredibly corrupt Also available from Pathfinder Press: regime repeatedly sought compromise Teamster Bureaucracy with Japanese impeby Farrell Dobbs rialism but the costly How the rank-and-file Teamsters leaderconcessions did not ship organized to oppose World War II, halt the Japanese racism, and government efforts to gag advance. It was class-struggle-minded workers. $18.95 only the revolutionary resistance of the Chinese people that Socialism on Trial prevented Japan by James P. Cannon from consolidating The basic ideas of socialism, explained in its conquests and testimony during 1941 trial of leaders of the overrunning all of Minneapolis Teamsters union and Socialist China. Workers Party framed up and imprisoned Chinese revolution under the notorious Smith “Gag” Act during The [Chiang World War II. $16 Kai-shek regime’s] do-nothing record, In Defense of Marxism its outrageous exThe Social and Political Contradictions of the Soviet actions from the Union on the Eve of World War II $24.95 peasants, its lootby Leon Trotsky ing and plundering, The Militant April 25, 2005 7 Women and the 1983 Burkina Faso revolution Below are excerpts from Women’s Liberation and the African Freedom Struggle, one of Pathfinder’s Books of the Month for April. This speech was given by Thomas Sankara to a rally of several thousand women held in Burkina Faso on March 8, 1987, on the occasion of International Women’s Day. Sankara was the central leader of the Aug. 4, 1983, popular uprising in the West African country of Upper Volta—a former French colony—ushering in one of the deepest revolutions in African history. The country was renamed Burkina Faso, “Land of the Upright,” one year later. On Oct. 15, 1987, Sankara was murdered in the course of a counterrevolutionary military coup that destroyed the revolutionary government. Copyright © 1990 by Pathfinder Press. Reprinted by permission. BOOKS OF THE MONTH BY THOMAS SANKARA On October 2, 1983, in the Political Orientation Speech, the National Council of the Revolution laid out clearly the main axis of the fight for women’s liberation. It made a commitment to work to mobilize, organize, and unify all the active forces of the nation, particularly women. The Political Orientation Speech had this to say specifically in regard to women: “Women will be an integral part of all the battles we will have to wage against the various shackles of neocolonial society and for the construction of a new society. They will take part in all levels of the organization of the life of the nation as a whole, from conceiving projects to making decisions and implementing them. The final goal of “T April BOOKS OF THE MONTH PATHFINDER READERS CLUB SPECIALS 25% DISCOUNT Militant/Ernest Harsch Thomas Sankara, central leader of the Burkina Faso revolution, speaking March 8, 1987, on the occasion of International Women’s Day. this great undertaking is to build a free and prosperous society in which women will be equal to men in all domains.” There can be no clearer way to conceptualize and explain the question of women and the liberation struggle ahead of us. “The genuine emancipation of women is that which entrusts responsibilities to them and involves them in productive activity and in the different struggles the people face. Women’s genuine emancipation is one that exacts men’s respect and consideration.” What is clearly indicated here, sister comrades, is that the struggle to liberate women is above all your struggle to deepen our democratic and popular revolution, a revolution that grants you from this moment on the right to speak and act in building a new society of justice and equality, in which men and women have the same rights and responsibilities. The democratic and popular revolution has created the conditions for such a liberating struggle. It now falls to you to act with the greatest sense of responsibility in breaking through all the shackles and obstacles that enslave women in backward societies like ours and to assume your share of the responsibilities in the political fight to build a new society at the service of Africa and all humanity. In the very first hours of the democratic and popular revolution we said that “eman- Che Guevara Talks to Young People by Ernersto Che Guevara UNITED STATES Women and the Family by Leon Trotsky $12.00 Special price: $9.00 Women’s Liberation and the African Freedom Struggle by Thomas Sankara “There is no true social revolution without the liberation of women,” explains the leader of the 1983–87 revolution in the West African nation of Burkina Faso. $5.00 Special price: $3.50 Malcolm X Talks to Young People by Malcolm X This expanded edition includes four talks and an interview given to young people in Ghana, the United Kingdom, and the United States in the last months of his life. $15.00 Special price: $11.50 Join Pathfinder Readers Club for $10 and receive discounts all year long ORDER ONLINE AT WWW.PATHFINDERPRESS.COM OFFER 8 GOOD UNTIL IF YOU LIKE THIS PAPER, LOOK US UP Where to find dis tribu tors of the Militant, Perspectiva Mun dial, and New International, and a full display of Pathfinder books. The Argentine-born revolutionary challenges youth of Cuba and the world to read and to study. $15.00 Special price: $11.50 J AUNE PRIL 30 30 cipation, like freedom, is not granted but conquered. It is for women themselves to put forward their demands and mobilize to win them.” The revolution has not only laid out the objectives of the struggle for women’s liberation but has also indicated the road to be followed and the methods to be used, as well as the main actors in this battle. We have now been working together, men and women, for four years in order to achieve success and come closer to our final goal. We should note the battles waged and the victories won, as well as the setbacks suffered and the difficulties encountered. This will aid us in preparing and leading future struggles. So what tasks does our democratic and popular revolution have in respect to women’s emancipation? What acquisitions do we have, and what obstacles still remain? One of the main acquisitions of the revolution with regard to women’s emancipation was, without any doubt, the establishment of the Women’s Union of Burkina (UFB). This is a major acquisition because it has provided the women of our country with a framework and a solid mechanism with which to wage a successful fight. Establishing the UFB represents a big victory in that it allows for the mobilization of all politically active women around well-defined and just objectives, under the leadership of the National Council of the Revolution. The UFB is an organization of militant and serious women who are determined to change things, to fight until they win, to fall and fall again, but to get back on their feet and go forward without retreating. This is the new consciousness that has taken root among the women of Burkina, and we should all be proud of it. Comrades, the Women’s Union of Burkina is your combat weapon. It belongs to you. Sharpen it again and again so that its blade will cut more deeply, bringing you ever-greater victories. The different initiatives directed at women’s emancipation that the government has taken over a period of a little more than three years are certainly inadequate. But they have put us on the right road, to the point where our country can present itself as being in the vanguard of the battle to liberate women. Women of Burkina participate more and more in decision making and in the real exercise of popular power. They are present everywhere the country is being built. You can find them at every work site: in the Sourou [Valley irrigation project], in our reforestation programs, in vaccination brigades, in Operation Clean Town, in the Battle for the Railroad, and so on. Step by step, the women of Burkina have gained a foothold everywhere, are asserting themselves and demolishing all the male chauvinist, backward conceptions of men. And this process will go on until women are present in Burkina’s entire social and professional fabric. For three and a half years our revolution has worked to systematically eliminate all practices that demean women, such as prostitution and related activity, like vagrancy and female juvenile delinquency, forced marriages, female circumcision, and their particularly difficult living conditions. By working to solve the water problem, by building windmills in the villages, by assuring the widespread use of the improved stove, by building public nurseries, carrying out daily vaccinations, and encouraging healthy, abundant, and varied eating habits, the revolution has no doubt greatly contributed to improving the quality of women’s lives…. We must collectively remain alert to women’s access to productive work. It is this work that emancipates and liberates women by assuring them economic independence and a greater social role, as well as a more complete and accurate understanding of the world. ALABAMA: Birmingham: 3029A Bessemer Road. Zip: 35208. Tel: (205) 7800021. E-mail: [email protected] CALIFORNIA: Los Angeles: 4229 S. Central Ave. Zip: 90011. Tel: (323) 233-9372. E-mail: [email protected] San Fran cisco: 3926 Mission St. Zip: 94112. Tel: (415) 584-2135. E-mail:swpsf @sbcglobal.net COLORADO: Craig: 11 West Victory Way, Suite 205. Zip: 81625. Mailing address: P.O. Box 1539. Zip: 81625. Tel: (970) 8246380.E-mail: [email protected] FLORIDA: Miami: 8365 NE 2nd Ave. #206 Zip: 33138. Tel: (305) 7564436. E-mail: [email protected]; Tampa: 1441 E. Fletcher, Suite 421. Zip: 33612. Tel: (813) 910-8507. E-mail: [email protected] GEORGIA: Atlanta: 2791 Lakewood Ave. Zip: 30315. Mailing address: P.O. Box 162515. Zip 30321. Tel: (404) 768-1709. E-mail: [email protected] ILLINOIS: Chicago: 3557 S. Archer Ave. Zip: 60609. Tel: (773) 890-1190. E-mail: [email protected] IOWA: Des Moines: 3707 Douglas Ave. Zip: 50310. Tel: (515) 255-1707. E-mail: [email protected] MASSACHUSETTS: Boston: 12 Bennington St., 2nd Floor, East Boston. Mailing address: P.O. Box 261. Zip: 02128. Tel: (617) 569-9169. E-mail: [email protected] MICHIGAN: Detroit: 4208 W. Vernor The Militant April 25, 2005 St. Mailing address: P.O. Box 44739. Zip: 48244-0739. Tel: (313) 554-0504. E-mail: [email protected] MINNESOTA: St. Paul: 113 Bernard St., West St. Paul. Zip: 55118. Tel: (651) 6446325. E-mail: [email protected] NEBRASKA: Omaha: P.O. Box 7005. Zip: 68107. E-mail: [email protected] NEW JERSEY: Newark: 168 Bloomf ield Avenue, 2nd Floor. Zip: 07104. Tel: (973) 481-0077. E-mail: [email protected] NEW YORK: Manhattan: 306 W. 37th Street, 10th floor. Zip: 10018. Tel: (212) 629-6649. E-mail: [email protected] OHIO: Cleveland: 11018 Lorain Ave. Zip: 44111. Tel: (216) 688-1190. E-mail: [email protected] PENNSYLVANIA: Hazleton: 69 North Wyoming St. Zip: 18201. Tel: (570) 454-8320. Email: [email protected] Philadelphia: 188 W. Wyoming Ave. Zip: 19140. Tel: (215) 455-2682. E-mail: [email protected] Pittsburgh: 5907 Penn Ave. Suite 225. Zip. 15206. Tel: (412) 365-1090. E-mail: PittsburghSWP@ netscape.com TEXAS: Houston: 4800 W. 34th St. Suite C-51A. Zip: 77092. Tel: (713) 869-6550. Email: [email protected] UTAH: Price: 11 W. Main St. Rm. 103. Zip: 84501 Tel: (435) 613-1091. [email protected] WASHINGTON, D.C.: 3717 B Georgia Ave. NW, Ground floor. Zip: 20010. Tel: (202) 722-1315. E-mail: [email protected] WASHINGTON: Seattle: 5418 Rainier Avenue South. Zip: 981182439. Tel: (206) 323-1755. E-mail: [email protected] AUSTRALIA Sydney: 1st Flr, 3/281-287 Beamish St., Campsie, NSW 2194. Mailing address: P.O. Box 164, Campsie, NSW 2194. Tel: (02) 9718 9698. E-mail: [email protected] CANADA ONTARIO: Toronto: 2238 Dundas St. West, Suite 201, M6R 3A9 Tel: (416) 5359140. E-mail: [email protected] FRANCE Paris: P.O. 175, 23 rue Lecourbe. Postal code: 75015. Tel: (01) 40-10-28-37. E-mail: [email protected] ICELAND Reykjavík: Skolavordustig 6B. Mailing address: P. Box 0233, IS 121 Reykjavík. Tel: 552 1202. E-mail: [email protected] NEW ZEALAND Auckland: Suite 3, 7 Mason Ave., Otahuhu. Postal address:P.O. Box 3025. Tel: (9) 2768885.E-mail: [email protected] Christchurch: Gloucester Arcade, 129 Gloucester St. Post al ad dress: P.O. Box 13-969. Tel: (3) 365-6055. E-mail: [email protected] SWEDEN Stockholm: Bjulvägen 33, kv, S-122 41 Enskede. Tel: (08) 31 69 33. E-mail: [email protected] UNITED KINGDOM ENGLAND: London: First Floor, 120 Bethnal Green (Entrance in Brick Lane). Postal code: E2 6DG. Tel: 020-7613-2466. E-mail: [email protected] SCOTLAND: Edinburgh: First Floor, 3 Grosvenor St., Haymarket. Postal Code: EH12 5ED. Tel: 0131-226-2756. E-mail: [email protected] There Is No Peace: 60 Years Since End of World War II WWII: Three wars in one Continued from page 7 and demonstrations swept India, and the Congress Party of the Indian capitalists called for a civil-disobedience campaign to win independence from England, the Trotskyists supported the struggle. The Indian Communist Party leadership, while paying lip service to India’s objective of independence, opposed the actual struggle. In common with Churchill, the U.S. State Department and the British Labour Party brass, the CP declared that the Indian people’s rising interfered with the Allied war effort and thus offered objective aid to Japanese imperialism. This prognosis turned out to be somewhat inaccurate. The August 1942 strikes did not help the Japanese at all, but they did aid the cause of Indian freedom and the revolutionary struggle to liquidate imperialism in general. By 1945 the British were compelled to grant India her independence or face a revolutionary movement far more powerful and determined than even the August 1942 uprising. But the Communist Party was so discredited by its wartime position in India that it lost its opportunity to become a leading force. Still worse, it brought discredit on communism itself. The result was that the Congress Party filled the vacuum and won domination of Indian politics. The Indian bourgeoisie was able to arrest the logical course of the revolutionary ferment, preserve the capitalist structure, and survive as a ruling class. India is paying for this today with abysmal poverty, the constant threat of famine, and economic stagnation. Were the miners right? Besides the three wars already considered, it will prove instructive to bring into sharper focus still another conflict—the class struggle in America during World War II. The capitalists did not forget their class interests during the war. On the contrary, as always, they utilized the bloodbath to advance their interests, beginning with those that could be added up in bank accounts in the form of profits. Through Roosevelt in the White House and through the Democratic-Republican coalition in Congress they sought to “contain” the labor movement under threat of massive retaliation. The Socialist Workers Party called attention to this elementary fact again and again, and, in the fighting socialist tradition of Eugene V. Debs, advocated that the working people should defend their interests despite the war. This was the positive content of socialist opposition to the imperialist conflict. It was that simple in essence. The American workers were resolutely against fascism anywhere, any time, at home, in Italy, in Germany, in Spain. They tended to support the war in the mistaken belief that Roosevelt was telling the truth about fighting for democracy and for “four freedoms.” But the fraud of Roosevelt’s “equality of sacrifice” program, which froze wages in the face of inflation while profit-taking reached astronomical heights; revelations of how the giant corporations honored their lucrative cartel obligations with German firms while German and American workers were killing one another; the evident intentions of the employers, operating from the vantage point of government boards, to rob workers of their union gains—all these prompted the American working people to look to their own interests. The miners led the resistance. In an epic series of coal mine strikes in 1943, the United Mine Workers stood up to the combined pressure of the employers, the Roosevelt administration, the courts, the big business press, lynch-minded professional patriots “The capitalists did not forget their class interests in the war. On the contrary, they used the bloodbath to advance them.” and the AFL and CIO bureaucracy.7… Organized labor in America owes its existence today to the success of the wartime mine workers strikes. Emboldened by what the miners had gained through militant struggle, rank-and-file unionists everywhere pressed for similar concessions from the employers and their government. The postwar union-busting schemes of the monopolies were drowned in the great strike wave of 1946 when almost two million workers walked the picket lines at one time. GIs demand: ‘Get us home!’ The class struggles touched off by the mine strikes paid off in another direction as well. They inspired the “Get Us Home” demonstrations of American troops in the European and Pacific theaters following V-J Day. Big business had different plans for the servicemen. It wanted the GI’s to police the world and ready themselves to march against the Soviet Union. The draftees, led by union men in the ranks, frustrated these plans. The brass hats had to accede to the servicemen’s demands. The War Department was forced to curtail the size of its armed forces abroad and to replace the veterans with unseasoned drafted youths. That slowed down American imperialism’s timetable for World War III, a fortunate occurrence from which we benefit to this day. CPUSA outvied professional patriots In contrast to the revolutionary socialist course of supporting such militant struggles, the Communist Party leaderFOR FURTHER READING ship joined in making a cult of Roosevelt and of The Struggle for a Proletarian Party outvying the proby James P. Cannon fessional patriots On the eve of World War II, a founder in broadcasting of the communist movement in the the ChurchillU.S. and leader of the Communist Roosevelt-Stalin International in Lenin’s time defends propaganda about a war for the program and party-building norms democracy and of Bolshevism. Also available in French. “four freedoms.” $21.95 The Communist Fascism: What It Is and How to Fight It Party became notorious in the by Leon Trotsky labor movement Communist leader Leon Trotsky examines the class origins for its “win-theand character of fascist movements and advances a workwar” zeal. ing-class strategy to combat and defeat this malignant They backed danger. $6.00 the Nazi-like “relocation” of JapaThe Fight against Fascism in the U.S.A. nese-Americans Forty Years of Struggle Described by in concentration Participants camps because by James P. Cannon of their color and Lessons from the fight against incipient ancestry; they fascist movements since the capitalist told the Negro crisis and labor radicalization of the people that under no circumstances 1930s. $8.00 must the struggle WWW.PATHFINDERPRESS.COM for equality be Mass march in the streets of Bombay August 1947 celebrated Indian independence from British colonial rule. India had been the “crown jewel” of British imperialism. pressed during wartime; they frothed at the mouth over the coal miners daring to go out on strike; they shouted hooray for the conviction of the SWP leaders under the Smith Act and urged even stiffer sentences; they took the lead in promoting the no-strike pledge and proposed to extend it after the war; they cheered for the bombs that Truman dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki; they fought every manifestation of sentiment for building a labor party. In brief, under the slogan of fighting a war for “democracy,” they opposed the democratic right of the working people to defend their standard of living, their union organizations, and their political interests in wartime. What this cost the Communist Party in political influence is now apparent to all. When the postwar witch-hunt began, the unfortunate Communist Party victims found themselves without a friend in the labor movement. The wartime record of Stalinism on civil liberties, civil rights, labor solidarity, defense of the working-class standard of living, and defense of the trade unions against employer attack contributed mightily to the catastrophic collapse of the party.8 How to defeat fascism Even at this late date, in face of this eloquent record, one still hears the argument, “But wasn’t it necessary to place the defeat of fascism in the front rank of socialist objectives?” The answer is, “Yes, it was necessary. The problem was how to defeat fascism.” The Socialist Workers Party held that the only effective course is through development of struggles of the working class and its allies. The beginning point is militant defense of democratic conquests that are suffering erosion at the hands of a capitalist class inclined in its old age to resort to fascism. Some of the key issues involve civil liberties, civil rights, the equality of minorities, democracy in the armed forces, freedom of the trade unions from government control, participation of labor in politics in defense of its own interests and through its own political party. The key is to strengthen the labor movement and this includes defending it from bureaucratic abuses and violations of the democratic process in the unions themselves. The construction of a powerful labor movement able to represent the political interests of the poorest levels of the population, including farmers and small businessmen, prepares the way for socialism—the only enduring guarantee against reaction, fascist or otherwise. The Communist Party took the opposite course—to utilize the anti-fascist sentiments of the working class to instill trust in “liberal” capitalists in general and the Democratic Party in particular…. To recapitulate: It is not true that sectarian considerations motivated the Socialist Workers position in World War II. Opposition to the imperialist conflict derived from general revolutionary socialist principles tested for more than a century. They were applied, moreover, with careful consideration to the complex intertwining of three wars involving highly contradictory forces. Experience verified the correctness of supporting the Soviet Union, the colonial countries and the struggles of the American workers in wartime; and of opposing with utmost resoluteness the imperialist powers that ventured to plunge mankind into this fearful carnage. The positions taken in World War II retain their importance today for the insight they offer to current attitudes in the struggle for peace and as a guide for correct ways of opposing the cold war. Militant workers have much to gain from studying them as they consider how to avert the nuclear conflict which American imperialism began preparing as a direct consequence of its victory in World War II. NOTES 1 For instance, the Sunday Worker, Feb. 25, 1940, stated: “The Soviet Union’s pacts with Germany rescued the German people from the worst of counter-revolutionary wars and ditched the predatory plans of the Allied warmakers against both the Soviet and the German peoples.” The Comintern press spoke of the Anglo-French alliance as the “imperialist bloc against the German people.” A main slogan of the American Communist party was, “The Yanks Are Not Coming!” Roosevelt was denounced as an imperialist warmonger, a characterization closer to the truth than his later designation as a champion of peace, democracy and AmericanSoviet friendship. 2 In August 1939, Stalin signed a nonaggression pact with the Nazi government of Germany, which freed Hitler’s hands for the invasion of Western Europe. 3 V. I. Lenin. Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism, written January-July,1916,with prefaces to new editions, April 20, 1917, and July 6, 1920. 4 The viewpoint of the Socialist Workers Party is well expressed in a resolution adopted by the Tenth National Convention in October 1942. Another key document is the manifesto of the Fourth International, Imperialist War and the Proletarian Revolution. For a defense of the position under fire, Socialism on Trial, the official record of James P. Cannon’s testimony in the first Smith Act trial, is recommended. [It can be obtained from Pathfinder Press.] 5 In his speech at the secret session of the Twentieth Congress of the Soviet Communist party, Khrushchev referred to some of Stalin’s crimes. His list included debilitation of the command of the armed forces in the blood purges of the 1930’s and Stalin’s refusal to believe reports that the Nazis were planning to attack. In 1941 the Trotskyist movement pointed to these as among the major reasons for the initial costly defeats suffered by the Soviet Union. 6 For a vivid account of how China’s struggle, thrown on its own resources, developed stage by stage to the profoundest overturn since the October 1917 Revolution in Czarist Russia, the reader is referred to Jack Belden’s China Shakes the World. 7 See the excellent account by, Art Preis, “How the Miners Won,” in the spring 1959 issue of International Socialist Review. 8 In Atlanta Penitentiary as a victim of the Smith Act, John Gates, a top leader of the Communist Party, read how Debs, who had been sentenced to the same prison as a witchhunt victim in World War I, had been able to run an effective campaign for President from behind bars and had been eventually freed by a huge mass movement in his behalf. In painful contrast to this, Gates observed, there was an “almost complete absence of popular concern over our imprisonment.” (The Story of an American Communist, Thomas Nelson & Sons, New York.) Gates failed to note that Debs followed a policy of socialist opposition to World War I. The Militant April 25, 2005 9 China-Japan conflict EDITORIAL Killing of Diallo was a crime We are using the editorial space this week to publish the statement below released April 5 by Martín Koppel, the Socialist Workers Party candidate for mayor of New York City, in response to remarks by Democratic Party candidate Fernando Ferrer that the 1999 killing of Amadou Diallo by New York cops “was not a crime.” Our campaign condemns the statement by Democratic mayoral candidate Fernando Ferrer that the police killing of Amadou Diallo was “not a crime” and that the cops were “overindicted.” We join in the outrage expressed by many others who protested in the streets to demand the cops be jailed for murder after this West African-born worker was gunned down in 1999. The shooting of Amadou Diallo was a crime. He was killed in a hail of 41 bullets, at the entrance to his apartment building, when four cops from the notorious Street Crimes unit accosted him. They claimed they thought he pulled out a gun, but had only taken out his wallet to show his ID. The trial that acquitted the cops was a travesty of justice. It signaled open season by the cops on working people, especially those who are Black and other oppressed nationalities. The cops should have been convicted and jailed. The main defense of the killer cops was that Diallo fit the “generic description” of the criminal they were supposedly looking for. In other words, he was a Black man in a working-class neighborhood. This is how cops approach working people and oppressed nationalities—as criminals or potential criminals. The Diallo verdict is not an example of how the U.S. judicial system malfunctions. This is how the capitalist justice system works. As the judge explained to the jury, the existing laws and police regulations make it legal for cops to act as on-the-spot executioners in cases like this. The laws are such because the entire system of police, courts, and prisons is designed to protect the rule and property of the tiny class of billionaire families and keep working people in check—from cops who arrest strikers on picket lines to the U.S. military police who torture those locked up in the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. What the cops who killed Diallo did was part of carrying out that job. Democratic politician Ferrer’s remarks are consistent with his role as a loyal defender of big-business interests. He above all wants to reassure the wealthy rulers of New York that he will unswervingly carry out that task if elected mayor. The same is true of Democrat Virginia Fields, Republican Michael Bloomberg, and any of the other capitalist candidates. On Mayor Bloomberg’s watch, police continue to carry out brutality against working people, such as the unprovoked killing of Timothy Stansbury, a Black teenager, last year. The Socialist Workers campaign stands with those fighting police brutality and other struggles of working people. We point to the need to act independently of the bosses’ government and parties—the Democrats and Republicans—and rely on our own strength and mobilization, especially on our organizations, the unions, to advance the interests of the vast majority. ‘No U.S. exit strategy’ from Iraq Continued from front page a new government. The presidential council—comprising President Jallal Talabani, who was appointed president April 6, and his two deputies—named as new prime minister Ibrahim Jaafari, a leader of the United Iraqi Alliance and a Shiite Muslim. A week later, Talabani called on Washington to maintain its forces in Iraq for at least two years. “We are trying to build, as soon as possible, our military,” Talabani told CNN. “Within two years we can do it.” On April 9, tens of thousands of supporters of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and his Mahdi militia staged rallies in Baghdad and elsewhere in Iraq demanding the withdrawal of the U.S.-led occupation forces. In the northern city of Mosul, Iraqi troops now patrol a sector of two square miles in the heart of the city. It is one of two Areas of Operations Iraq, covered by the U.S.trained Iraqi armed forces. The other area is around Haifa Street in Baghdad. U.S. troops are on call nearby for emergency support, according to the Washington Post. Last November, some 8,000 U.S.-trained Iraqi police and National Guardsmen were overrun in the city by forces loyal to the former Baath Party regime of Saddam Hussein. Baathist forces, including units of Hussein’s former military, staged the attack in Mosul in a failed effort to divert American forces from a ground assault on their stronghold in Fallujah. In addition, the U.S. military claims it continues to takes steps in dismantling the Baathist-led armed groups. It has captured or killed several top leaders, including close lieutenants of Hussein, and of al-Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. On April 10, Iraqi authorities announced the arrest of Hussein’s cousin, Ibrahim Sabawi, reported the Daily Times of Pakistan. Sabawi is accused of channeling funds to antigovernment forces for attacks on U.S. troops and Iraqi security forces. As of early April, more than 17,000 men and women are being held by U.S. and Iraqi forces—most without charges—on suspicion of involvement in armed groups, according to the Daily Times. Meanwhile, on April 7 Talabani appointed United Iraqi Alliance (UIA) leader Ibrahim Jaafari as prime minister. The alliance won a slim majority of the 275 seats in the National Assembly in the January elections. The UIA negotiated for two months with the slate led by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and Kurdistan Democratic Party in order to form a coalition government. Talabani is the PUK’s central leader. Iyad Allawi, the outgoing prime minister in the U.S.picked interim government, announced that his bloc in the assembly would join the new regime. Allawi’s Iraqi Accord slate ran a distant third, gaining 40 seats. Tens of thousands of supporters of Muqtada al-Sadr marched in Baghdad on the second anniversary of the overthrow of the Hussein regime, as the cleric seeks to increase his leverage with the new regime. The protesters demanded a timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. troops, release of leaders of their group from prison, and more rapid steps toward a trial of Hussein. Moayed Kharzaji, a speaker at the protest, added another demand: that Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath, no longer be a day off, the Washington Post reported. Al-Sadr’s militia suffered substantial losses in fierce battles with U.S. troops last year. In September, al-Sadr signed a peace accord and agreed to disarm the militia. His supporters participated in the elections but won few seats in the National Assembly. Many of the marchers came from the Sadr City suburb of Baghdad. Others reportedly traveled from as far away as Amara, Nasiriyah, and Basra in the south. Overwhelmingly Shiite, demonstrators rallied in Fridos Square, where two years earlier U.S. troops tore down a huge statue of Saddam Hussein. “No America, No Saddam, Yes to Islam,” they chanted. The same day, about 1,500 people, mostly Sunnis, reportedly protested around similar demands in Ramadi. As Talabani and Rumsfeld indicated subsequently, however, the U.S.-backed government and Washington and its allies have no plans to meet the main demand of the protesters any time soon. Communist League campaign in UK Continued from Page 3 on British nationalist and anti-immigrant themes. Joining the Britain First chorus is former left Labour Member of Parliament George Galloway, now leader of a new formation called Respect the Unity Coalition. Galloway is contesting the Bethnal Green and Bow constituency and has declared his organization—which involves the British Socialist Workers Party and other left-wing groups— the “ghost of Labour’s past.” “The Royal Navy ships should be brought back from the Gulf to patrol our shores in order to stop the entry of drugs into our country,” Galloway said during the BBC London Radio election debate that featured Bethnal Green and Bow candidates. The war against Iraq should be replaced by a “war against drugs,” the Respect leader stated. “The campaign against immigrants has been joined in an attempt to scapegoat foreign-born workers for the crisis of the profit system,” Celia Pugh told a packed audience of 150 at an April 3 assembly organized in London’s Elephant and Castle by the Frente Latino (Latin Front). Also addressing the assembly were La- 10 The Militant April 25, 2005 bour MP Harriet Harman and local councillors. “Through threats of deportation, the bosses and capitalist politicians aim to intimidate immigrant workers from fighting back against low pay,” Pugh added. “But they’re failing in their efforts.” The Communist League candidate described the victory of cleaners employed at the giant Canary Wharf office building complex in London’s docklands area who have recently won union recognition. Office cleaners in London are overwhelmingly immigrant, principally from Latin America. “The fight by the cleaners shows how immigration strengthens the working class as a whole,” Pugh said. She explained that her party calls for an end to factory raids and deportations. “There are an estimated 400,000 immigrants from Latin America in Britain,” said Frente Latino organizer Gloria Gómez, about 40 percent of whom are estimated to be undocumented. “We have to stop being invisible, we must lose our fear, and fight openly for our rights,” Gómez said to applause. She announced that the new organization, formed just six months ago, is growing rapidly. Continued from front page escalation of the aggressive posture of the two imperialist powers towards China. At the same time, Tokyo is working closely with Washington on the deployment of a “missile defense” shield—which would give the U.S. rulers and their allies firststrike nuclear capacity—and other moves to ratchet up the pressure on north Korea. Tokyo’s nationalist campaign To justify their increasingly aggressive posture, Japan’s rulers are waging a campaign to foster nationalism among the population. To succeed they must prettify the history of Japanese imperialism. During the first half of the 20th century, in their competition with their imperialist rivals in Europe and the United States, the Japanese rulers occupied and sought to colonize Korea, large sections of China, the Philippines, and a large part of South Asia. At its height, the Japanese empire extended throughout the nations of the South China Sea, including territories that today make up the Philippines, Thailand, Burma, Vietnam, and Indonesia. The Japanese occupation forces were notoriously brutal. In Korea, for example, during the 1910–45 occupation, the Japanese overlords sought to wipe out the Korean language and culture and impose the Shinto religion on the Korean people. They also suppressed in blood all nationalist movements. The resistance by the Chinese to the Japanese occupation was a struggle of great magnitude and took a tremendous human toll. Some 3 million Chinese soldiers and 9 million Chinese civilians died defending their country during the 1931–1945 invasion by Tokyo. This struggle gave impetus to the national liberation movement that developed into a socialist revolution in China and north Korea following World War II. The demands for a public apology by Tokyo and justice and restitution for the victims, like the women subjected to sex slavery, continue to spark protests in both countries. Some of the most brutal crimes of Japanese imperialism during that period go almost without mention in the new history textbooks. In 2001, six out of the eight history textbooks mentioned a specific death toll in the 1937 Nanking Massacre in China, where some 100,000 to 300,000 Chinese were killed. Only one of the newly approved texts mentions the death toll, saying the dead “may have numbered as many as 200,000,” according to the International Herald Tribune. Sex slavery Likewise with sex slavery. Only one of the newly approved texts contains a reference to this practice by the Japanese army, compared to three of eight in 2001, and all history textbooks prior to that, the Herald reported. Similarly, only three of the newly approved texts say that Asian laborers taken to Japan were brought “forcibly”—an undisputed historical fact, which was previously acknowledged in school books. The textbooks also categorically state that the Tokdo islets claimed by both Korea and Japan belong to Japan and were illegally occupied by south Korea. This has provoked outrage in Korea. The publishers and supporters of the new textbooks openly admit that Japanese imperialism’s crimes are deliberately downplayed or painted over to instill patriotism in Japanese youth. “Great Britain committed war crimes. America too,” said Professor Nobukatsu Fujioka, a defender of the new textbooks, according to the British daily Independent. “My concern is that Japanese children are taught to hate their country. They are taught that only Japan was wrong in the war. Don’t all countries use history to instill pride in students?” As part of this campaign, the Tokyo metropolitan government has begun punishing teachers who refuse to stand and sing Japan’s national anthem—a symbol of militarism to many in Japan and the rest of Asia. During this spring’s graduation ceremonies, 53 teachers were punished. A national holiday that was once called “Emperor’s Day” had been changed to “Green Day,” following the 1989 death of Japanese emperor Hirohito. This year the Japanese government is renaming it “Showa Day,” to explicitly commemorate the birthday of Hirohito, who led Japan during its conquest of Asia and is a revered figure in the Japanese rightwing. Japanese prime minister Junichiro Koizumi has begun making regular visits to the Yasukuni Shrine for Japan’s war dead. The memorial is the burial place for Japanese officers who oversaw some of Tokyo’s worst crimes during its imperial expansion. Protests in China, Korea About 20,000 people gathered at Japan’s embassy and in an electronics district in Beijing April 9 to protest the new textbooks. Demonstrators hurled rocks at the embassy and at Japanese businesses and called for a boycott of Japanese products. Similar mobilizations occurred over that weekend in Chengdu, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen. The protests were the largest such rallies in China since the U.S. bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade during the war in Yugoslavia in 1999. In Guangzhou, 10,000 protesters marched the following day to the offices of the Japanese consulate-general. In south Korea, Gil Won Ok, 77, one of the surviving Korean “comfort women” led a protest to the Japanese embassy over the same weekend, denouncing the campaign to whitewash Tokyo’s crimes. “Atone for the past and let me die in peace,” she told the rally. China’s ambassador to Japan Wang Yi criticized the protests, saying “the government does not agree with extreme action,” according to press reports. Chinese government officials pleaded with protesters to express themselves in a “calm and sane” manner. While the protests against Japan’s crimes are deeply popular, the Chinese government has moved to clamp down on them for fear that demonstrators may also use the political opening to level criticisms at China’s bureaucratic regime. On April 9, students rallying in front of the Japanese embassy were prevented by the police from moving to Tiananmen Square, where large studentled protests were bloodily suppressed by the Chinese military in 1989. Students have reported moves by the administration at some universities to block them from joining the anti-Tokyo actions. N.Y. bus drivers strike over early retirement BY WILLIE COTTON AND MARTÍN KOPPEL YONKERS, New York—Nearly 600 bus drivers and mechanics have been on strike here for six weeks against Liberty Lines. They are fighting for the right to early retirement without a big cut in pension benefits, and against increased costs for medical insurance. The strikers, members of Transport Workers Union (TWU) Local 100, have shut down the Bee-Line, the public bus service in Westchester County, which is operated by Liberty Lines, a private company. They have not only stood up to the owners’ intransigence but to attacks by county officials, a pro-company propaganda campaign by the big-business media, and arrests by the police. “If you’ve worked here for 25 years or more, you should be able to retire at 57. That’s not an unreasonable demand,” said picket captain Angel Giboyeaux, on the line the evening of April 5. “Some people develop serious health problems over time. Driving a bus is a stressful job and there’s a lot of wear and tear.” Giboyeaux, a bus driver with 16 years’ service, told the Militant that under the old contract, if workers retire at 57 instead of 62, the company permanently cuts nearly 25 percent off their retirement benefits. Other pickets noted that New York City transit workers, also members of TWU Local 100, can already retire at 55 with full benefits under their contract. They reported that last September one of their co-workers, John Toneske, with 27 years behind the wheel, was felled by a heart attack. Under the contract, however, Toneske, 52, would have had to put in another 10 years to be able to retire with full benefits. The unionists are also resisting the company’s attack on their health care. They report Liberty Lines has demanded that workers pay 5 percent of their health Militant/Willie Cotton insurance. This means that, as the costs of health care continue to skyrocket, the Bus drivers and mechanics striking Bee-Line/Liberty Lines in Westchester County, amount workers have to pay will keep New York, picket Yonkers garage April 5. They walked out six weeks ago to protest bosses’ attempt to cut health care and maintain steep penalties for early retirement. increasing. The company has also proposed that for each emergency room visit workers pay From where?” he asked, pointing to his whose education is being jeopardized, stiff fees—$200 for themselves and $400 pockets. elderly people trapped in apartments, and for their spouse and each child. The bosses also want to double the people that can’t get to work.” Day after One striker reported that the day before amount workers pay for medicine and to day, the Journal News publishes articles the strike began, both his wife and child drop retirees’ medical benefits entirely, suggesting that on account of the strike, had to go to the hospital emergency room. pickets reported. Giboyeaux said, “The working-class families now have to choose “This would now cost us $800 off the bat. company offered us this contract and said, between buying food or spending money on cab fare to get their kids to school. ‘Take it or leave it.’ We said: No way!” Unionists have organized pickets to The unionists say the company is pleading poverty. In response, at a recent rally the block buses that Liberty Lines is using to strikers displayed a giant inflatable cock- train replacement workers. Cops have arpendently of the employers’ class, not only roach depicting Liberty Lines boss Jerry rested more than 40 pickets during these on the economic level but in the political D’Amore. It carried a sign saying, “Hey actions, strikers said. The workers face charges of “disorderly conduct.” arena too, he added. “When workers go on Jerry, open the books, you crook.” The TWU members have held several County Executive Andrew Spano and the strike they often go up against not only the rallies to mobilize support. Their actions local media have also ganged up on the company but the cops, the courts, the govhave been joined by members of the TeamTWU members, trying to pit other workernment, and all its agencies. That helps underscore why we need a labor party, based ing people against the strikers. County sters, Painters, Local 32BJ of the Service on a fighting union movement, that defends transportation commissioner Larry Salley Employees International Union, and other the interests of workers and farmers 365 recently blamed the strike for “children unions. days a year,” Koppel said in an exchange with some hospital workers who asked what his campaign stood for. “We wouldn’t let the boss into our union. Likewise, we can’t let the bosses’ parties speak for working people,” Koppel said. CALIFORNIA PENNSYLVANIA “Our campaign presents demands that Los Angeles Pittsburgh help unify working people in struggle, The Transformation of the U.S. Military, Unintended Consequences of U.S. such as a massive public works program 100,000 AK-47s for Venezuela, and the Offensive in the Mideast: Mass demto rebuild schools and hospitals, repair the Prospects for Building a Revolutionary ostrations in Lebanon Signal Growing Movement. Speaker: Argiris Malapanis, subways, build affordable housing, and Instability. Speaker: Jeremy Rose, Socialeditor of the Militant. Sat. April 16. Dinist Workers Party. Fri. April 22. Dinner 6: other pressing projects that meet human ner 6:30 p.m., program 7:30 p.m. Donation. 30 p.m., program 7:30 p.m. Donation: needs and can create jobs for tens of thou4339 S. Central Ave. (323) 233-9372. $4 dinner, $5 program. 5907 Penn Ave., sands,” the socialist candidate continued. Room 225 (East Liberty—two blocks West “These demands are part of a strategy that of Highland) (412) 365-1090. instills the need for workers and farmers NEW YORK to organize a struggle to take power out of Manhattan TEXAS the hands of the capitalist class.” The killing of Amadou Diallo by the N.Y. police was a crime: An answer to the Houston While soapboxing April 10 in Inwood, Democratic and Republican candidates. There Is No Peace: 60 Years Since End a working-class neighborhood in upper Speaker: Martín Koppel, Socialist Workers of World War II. Speaker: Tom Leonard, Manhattan, Koppel told youth and workcandidate for mayor of New York. Fri. April veteran leader of the SWP, sailed as merers who stopped by: “We’re always told to 15. Dinner 7:00 p.m., program 8:00 p.m. Dochant seaman at end of WWII. Fri. April think like ‘Americans.’ But there isn’t one nation: $5 dinner, $5 program. 307 W. 36th 22, 7:30 p.m. 4800 W. 34 St., Suite C-51A. America—there are two Americas. That St. (north elevators) 10 flr. (212) 629-6649. (713) 869-6550. of the tiny handful of superrich families who rule this country, and that of working OHIO people. These classes have irreconcilable Cleveland interests.” Stockholm Socialist Workers 2005 Campaign: The Socialist Workers campaign begins Mobilizations Against Japanese ImperiRomina Green for Mayor of Cleveland. with the world, Koppel said. Workers and alism in China and Korea. Speaker: Dag Speaker: Romina Green, SWP candidate Tirsén, Communist League. Fri. April 22, farmers in the United States have common for mayor. Sat. April 23. Dinner 6:30 p.m., 7 p.m. Bjulevägen 33, 122 41 Enskede. interests with working people and the opprogram 7:30 p.m. Donation. 11018 Lorain (08) 31 69 33. pressed around the globe. “We oppose the Ave. (216) 688-1190. campaign by the U.S. rulers, under the banner of opposing nuclear proliferation, to prevent semicolonial countries from developing the sources of energy they need for economic development, including through nuclear power,” Koppel said. the opinion that the action by Congress and “Our campaign also calls for the imme- Terri Schiavo Since you cited opinion polls to justify the President in this case was an outright diate withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq, Afghanistan and other parts of central Asia, your position concerning “invasion of pri- invasion of privacy, which we opposed. We Colombia, Korea, the Balkans, and Guan- vacy” in the Schiavo case, will you also would have held to the same view even if agree that we should apply the results of the opinion polls had indicated the reverse tánamo Bay, Cuba.” Other SWP candidates announced in public opinion polls to the issue of gay results. Likewise, the Militant has consistently early April include James Harris for mayor marriages? And if not, why not? (Virtually every national poll shows advocated opposition to any discrimination of Atlanta; Margaret Trowe for mayor and Laura Garza for city council in Boston; that nearly a 2:1 majority oppose gay against gays and lesbians, including to any laws banning gay marriage, regardless of Romina Green for mayor of Cleveland; marriage.) what bourgeois opinion polls indicate. Ken Armstrong Ilona Gersh for mayor of Detroit; and Jacob —Editor Perasso for mayor and Rebecca Williamson by e-mail for city council in St. Paul, Minnesota. On April 11, a Socialist Workers conference in Reply from the editor Miami named Omari Musa as the party’s The letters column is an open forum The Militant articles on the Terri Schiavo candidate for mayor of that city. case used the results of opinion polls on for all viewpoints on subjects of interest to To join Socialist Workers candidates in government intervention as one measure working people. campaigning activities or to volunteer to of the fact that the campaign by the White Please keep your letters brief. Where help get them on the ballot, contact the House and Congress for the so-called right necessary they will be abridged. Please campaign center nearest you (see direc- to life in the Schiavo case backfired on its indicate if you prefer that your initials be tory on page 8). organizers. In two editorials we expressed used rather than your full name. Socialists organize ballot drives Continued from front page are trying to open up mines nonunion out here. That’s not right.” This miner said the bosses were planning to reopen nonunion a formerly union mine he had worked at in Cadiz, Ohio. During the last two weeks of June, campaigners for Chris Hoeppner, SWP candidate for mayor of Seattle, plan to collect about 3,000 signatures—double the requirement—to put his name on the ballot. That effort will be followed by a more ambitious petitioning campaign in New York, which will start July 12 and conclude at the beginning of August. The Socialist Workers Party, which nominated Martín Koppel as its candidate for New York City mayor on April 4, named other candidates for its citywide slate a week later. These are Arrin Hawkins for Manhattan borough president, Peter Musser for Bronx borough president, and Dan Fein for city comptroller. Campaigners project collecting more than 15,000 signatures—well above the required 7,500—for this ballot effort. Socialist Workers campaign supporters in New York have been distributing hundreds of copies of a statement by Koppel on the need to fight police brutalization of working people (see page 10). Many workers were glad to see such a response. “Good, this is one of us running,” an equipment repair worker in Manhattan’s Garment District told Koppel after reading the statement. The worker said he has plenty of experience with cops routinely harassing young workers in his neighborhood in the Bronx, and he himself was arbitrarily arrested once in what the police later shrugged off as a case of “mistaken identity.” Koppel and two campaign supporters took part in an April 8 mid-Manhattan rally by hospital and nursing home workers organized by Local 1199 of the Service Employees International Union. More than 1,000 workers mobilized to oppose cuts in hospital funding by the New York state government. “Our campaign got a lot of interest among these workers,” Koppel said. “We pointed out that the employers have been driving down wages and working conditions factory by factory and industry by industry. But that’s not enough to turn around the bosses’ declining profit rates and radically shift the relationship of forces between capital and labor. That’s why the ruling class and both of its main parties—the Democrats and Republicans—are going after Social Security and other programs that are not only a social extension of our wages but boost class solidarity.” The SWP platform points above all to workers’ need to organize unions and mobilize union power to defend themselves from this unrelenting antilabor offensive, Koppel said. Working people need to organize inde- MILITANT LABOR FORUMS SWEDEN LETTERS The Militant April 25, 2005 11 U.S.-Mexico border: vigilantes hunt immigrants Washington aids antilabor campaign by increasing number of border cops BY BRIAN WILLIAMS HOUSTON—A few hundred rightist vigilantes, a number of them carrying arms, have taken up positions along the ArizonaMexico border with the declared aim of assisting Border Patrol cops in preventing undocumented workers from entering the United States. The U.S. government, while criticizing the operation, has done nothing to stop it and has used the opportunity to increase border police in Arizona by 25 percent. This operation, organized by an outfit called the “Minuteman Project,” is stationed along a 23-mile stretch of border near the Arizona towns of Naco and Douglas. The group has announced that patrols in this area will be organized through the month of April with plans in the works to conduct similar operations in Texas and other states along the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border. The Minuteman Project pitches itself as “Americans doing the jobs Congress won’t do.” It claims these vigilantes are “operating within the law to support enforcement of the law.” “Many of the volunteers were carrying pistols, taking advantage of Arizona laws that allow people to openly carry firearms, even without a license,” said an April 6 Houston Chronicle article. “Some of the border watchers also wore bulletproof vests and camouflaged clothing.” According to a Chronicle reporter on the scene, about 200 people from across the United States participated in the first few days of these patrols. Vigilante leaders had said that more than 400 people took police officers, and military veterans. “This is what homeland security should look like from the Gulf of Mexico to the shores of the Pacific Ocean,” Simcox told the Chronicle. The Arizona chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has placed legal observers in the area to monitor the Minuteman vigilanBill Breaux of Houston was one of 200 rightist “Minute- tes. “The Minuteman men” vigilantes who patrolled a stretch of the border with project has created a powder-keg situation Mexico in Arizona to harass immigrant workers. with the potential to go beyond harassment and false imprisonment to real violence,” part in the first weekend’s orientation sesEleanor Eisenberg, executive director of the sion and rallies. They also claimed 1,300 to Arizona ACLU, told the media. take part over the course of the month on a The Washington Post reported that one volunteer basis. of the legal observers, Kathryn Ferguson, “The event also seemed much smaller a Tucson documentary filmmaker, had had than advertised,” noted an April 5 Washing“encounters with ‘a lot of verbally aggreston Post article. “Organizers had promised sive people’ who called her a terrorist or to place teams of monitors at quarter-mile communist.” or half-mile intervals along a 23-mile length Although U.S. president George Bush of border. But by midmorning Monday, all criticized the Minuteman Project as “vigiof the visible activity was clustered around a lante” activity, the White House took the two-mile stretch, where a dozen or so teams opportunity to further beef up the number were stationed.” of immigration cops on the scene. On March Chris Simcox, a newspaper owner from 30, the Department of Homeland Security the town of Tombstone, Arizona, and a announced it was assigning an additional leader of the group, said the majority of 500 immigration police to the Arizona borthe Minutemen are senior citizens, former Passport control tightened at U.S. borders BY PAUL PEDERSON The U.S. government has announced that by 2008 all U.S. citizens traveling to Canada, Mexico, or any other country in the Western Hemisphere will be required to show a passport to reenter the United States. Alongside this move, officials are also redesigning the U.S. passport—and pressuring other countries to follow suit—adding fingerprints and other identifiers that can be used to compile and access police databases and track the movement and other information on passport holders. “We have announced today a three-year phased implementation of a requirement established under Section 7209 of our Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act,” said Frank Moss, a U.S. State Department official, at an April 5 news conference announcing the move. “This provision means that by January 1, 2008, American citizens returning…from basically anywhere in the Western Hemisphere will be required to have a passport or other documentation…issued by DHS [Department of Homeland Security] to facilitate their return to the United States.” By the end of this year, U.S. citizens returning from the Caribbean, Bermuda, and Central America will be required to have a passport. By the end of 2006, a passport will be required for all air and sea travel into the United States from every country in the Western Hemisphere. Finally, by 2008 this requirement will extend to the land borders of Mexico and Canada. The move comes as part of a series of measures to increase the ability of the border cops to use passports to get information on travelers. The DHS has set a deadline of the end of October for the governments of 27 mainly western European countries— whose citizens may enter the United States without a visa—to modify their passports to include biometric identifiers like fingerprints and make them machine readable for use in accessing computer databases. Since January 2004, visitors to the United States from all except those 27 countries have been fingerprinted and photographed as they enter the country. Last fall these 12 requirements were extended to the 27 visa waiver countries. The U.S. government will be implementing similar changes to the passport to include biometric identifiers and other technology this coming year. “We will begin to issue biometric passports this summer and then phase in over the next six to nine months,” said Moss in the April 5 press conference. About 23 percent of the U.S. population has a passport, Moss said. It currently costs about $100 to obtain one. Hundreds of thousands of workers cross the U.S. northern and southern borders every day, now without having to use a passport. These moves are part of the efforts by the U.S. rulers to boost integration of their various police forces, centralize their security apparatus, and institutionalize a de facto national identification system. From immigration status, to criminal records, to “watch lists,” and Social Security numbers, the aim is to increase the ability of cops and other government agents to access information about individuals. Ultimately such moves strengthen the ability of cop agencies to victimize workers, concoct frameups, and harass those the government views as opponents of Washington’s policies. der—a 25 percent increase. Mexican president Vicente Fox labeled the Minutemen as “immigrant hunters.” Mexican government representatives said they would file civil suits against anyone who physically assaults Mexican nationals during this border patrol. On the Mexican side of the border, Grupo Beta, a government-sponsored organization that tries to discourage people from crossing the border without papers and aids those stranded in the desert, began patrolling the area along with armed police officers. “It is our duty to alert our citizens to the danger of armed vigilantes here,” said Bertha de la Rosa, director of Grupo Beta in the border town of Agua Prieta. Across this town, on the U.S. side of the border, Minutemen posed with their pistols for photographers, reported the Chronicle. On April 6, two Minutemen patrollers harassed and held an immigrant worker against his will. José Antonio Sepúlveda, 25, of Sinaloa, Mexico, was forced by Bryan Barton to be photographed and filmed with a T-shirt that read, “Bryan Barton caught me crossing the border and all I got was this lousy T-shirt.” He was also then given some food, water, and $20, and is now being held in federal custody. Robin Hvidston, a 50-year-old real estate agent from Upland, California, who has joined this rightist action, wears a button declaring her to be an “Undocumented Border Patrol Agent,” according to Reuters. “The volunteers say they have spotted 300 immigrants and tipped off Border Patrol agents to help catch them” during the first week of the project, Reuters said. “They are planning a ‘Minuteman Two’ later in the year.” “There is a real problem with assimilation,” Bill Breaux, a Minuteman from Houston, told the Chronicle. “Around Houston there are a lot of people who won’t carry American or Texas flags on their car. Instead they carry a flag from El Salvador or Mexico.” In 2004, immigration cops rounded up about 1.1 million undocumented immigrants along the border area and returned them to Mexico. In another development, Washington is phasing in a program known as US-VISIT, which requires Mexicans and other immigrants to be fingerprinted and photographed when they enter the United States. Eventually, their departure from the United States will be recorded in this system as well. New Zealand bus drivers fight for better wages BY TERRY COGGAN AUCKLAND, New Zealand—One thousand Stagecoach bus drivers from eight depots staged a 24-hour strike here April 4. The drivers have also carried out job actions, including voluntary overtime bans. They are demanding an immediate wage increase to $16 (US$11.50) an hour—a $2 to $3 raise—improved meal breaks, and shorter shifts. On the picket line outside Stagecoach’s Wiri depot in south Auckland, Tramways Union shop steward Brian Webb told the Militant the company is offering to increase wages to $16 an hour by 2007, but insists on the workers paying for the increase by giving up some allowances. “Their attitude, and actions like firing drivers for trivial offences, has made us stronger in our resolve to stand together,” Webb said. A particular bone of contention is Stagecoach’s system of broken shifts, several pickets said. The system obliges them to take a long unpaid break in the middle of the day between driving during the morning and evening peak passenger periods. “Those drivers are really at work for 12 hours, but get paid for eight,” said Webb. The company reentered negotiations April 11, averting a series of rolling stoppages planned to start the same day. The Militant April 25, 2005 The drivers strike took place alongside actions in support of the “Fair Share—Five in ’05” campaign launched by the Engineering, Printing and Manufacturing Union (EPMU). Pointing to the current economic upturn, the union, the largest in the country with 50,000 members, has said it will not settle for wage increases below 5 percent. Stopwork rallies—attended by 3,000 workers in Auckland on April 5 and more than 2,000 in Christchurch on April 6—have been organized in support of the campaign. Among the EPMU members who have taken action are 60 workers at Morgan Furniture in Auckland, who picketed the factory on the day of the rally. Sixty-five workers at the Colgate-Palmolive plant in Wellington held 24-hour strikes on March 30 and April 4. A picket line outside the plant attracted solidarity from other workers. A Maritime Union member told the Militant that he supports the 5 percent campaign “because we’ve had two or three years of boom time, but there’s been nothing for workers—‘trickle-down’ doesn’t work.” While the New Zealand capitalist economy is in a period of upturn, workers’ living standards have not kept pace. Although economic growth has added up to 20 percent over the past five years, during the same period the consumer price index has risen 13 percent—2 percent more than wages. Meanwhile, the unemployment rate is below 4 percent, an 18-year low. One recent survey says that two-thirds of employers are experiencing difficulties finding skilled staff. Writing in the New Zealand Herald on February 9, business columnist Brian Fallow commented on news reports that wage growth had begun to accelerate, rising 2.5 percent during the fiscal year that ended in September 2004. The “surprising thing” about the data, Fallow said, “is not that wage growth is accelerating, but that it hasn’t done so sooner or more strongly. A 2.5 percent average increase in wage rates when inflation is running at 2.7 percent represents a pretty lousy growth dividend. “Wages are still on average 25 percent lower than in Australia,” Fallow said in his column, which was titled “Employers have had it good.” The Council of Trade Unions, the national union federation, has noted that workers are also facing longer hours. Officials cited a survey last year that found that 52 percent of New Zealand companies had increased overtime in the previous 12 months. Christine Beresford in Wellington contributed to this article.
Similar documents
Atlanta: thousands march to extend Voting Rights Act
unionists and others who have supported the nearly two-year battle to win a union at the Co-Op mine in Huntington, Utah. The letter included an invitation to a solidarity picnic for the miners to b...
More information